We report on a field study about how software developers experience disorientation when using the Eclipse Java integrated development environment. We analyzed the data using the theory of visual momentum, identifying three factors that may lead to disorientation: the absence of connecting navigation context during program exploration, thrashing between displays to view necessary pieces of code, and the pursuit of sometimes unrelated subtasks.
Conducting controlled experiments about programming activities often requires the use of multiple tasks of similar difficulty. In previously reported work about a controlled experiment investigating software exploration tools, we tried to select two change tasks of equivalent difficulty to be performed on a medium-sized code base. Despite careful effort in the selection and confirmation from our pilot subjects finding the two tasks to be of equivalent difficulty, the data from the experiment suggest the subjects found one of the tasks more difficult than the other.In this paper, we report on early work to create a metric to estimate the cognitive difficulty for a software change task. Such a metric would help in comparing between studies of different tools, and in designing future studies. Our particular approach uses a graph-theoretic statistic to measure the complexity of the task solution by the connectedness of the solution elements. The metric predicts the perceived difficulty for the tasks of our experiment, but fails to predict the perceived difficulty for other tasks to a small program. We discuss these differences and suggest future approaches.
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