Software defect indicator

A Software Defect Indicator is a pattern that can be found in source code that is strongly correlated with a software defect, an error or omission in the source code of a computer program that may cause it to malfunction. When inspecting the source code of computer programs, it is not always possible to identify defects directly, but there are often patterns, sometimes called anti-patterns, indicating that defects are present.

Some examples of Software Defect Indicators:

See also

References

  1. William T. Ward: "Software Defect Prevention Using McCabe's Complexity Metric", Hewlett-Packard Journal, April 1989, pp 64-69: Control-flow complexity has been correlated with low reliability and frequent errors.
  2. David N. Card, Victor E. Church, and William W. Agresti: "An Empirical Study of Software Design Practices", IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, SE-12, no. 2, February 1986, pp 264-71: 46 percent of routines with no unused variables had no errors compared to only 17 to 29 percent for those with one or more unreferenced variables.

External links

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