Measuring Code Behavioral Similarity for Programming and Software Engineering Education
- Sihan Li ,
- Xusheng Xiao ,
- Blake Bassett ,
- Tao Xie ,
- Nikolai Tillmann
Proc. 38th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2016), Software Engineering Education and Training (SEET) |
In recent years, online programming and software engineering education via information technology has gained a lot of popularity. Typically, popular courses often have hundreds or thousands of students but only a few course staff members. Tool automation is needed to maintain the quality of education. In this paper, we envision that the capability of quantifying behavioral similarity between programs is helpful for teaching and learning programming and software engineering, and propose three metrics that approximate the computation of behavioral similarity. Specifically, we leverage random testing and dynamic symbolic execution (DSE) to generate test inputs, and run programs on these test inputs to compute metric values of the behavioral similarity. We evaluate our metrics on three real-world data sets from the Pex4Fun platform (which so far has accumulated more than 1.7 million game-play interactions). The results show that our metrics provide highly accurate approximation to the behavioral similarity. We also demonstrate a number of practical applications of our metrics including hint generation, progress indication, and automatic grading.