Program comprehension (also program understanding or
ourcecode comprehension) is a domain of computer science concerned with the ways
software engineers maintain existing source code. The cognitive and other processes involved are identified and studied. The results are used to develop tools and training.
[{{Cite book , last=Storey , first=Margaret-Anne , chapter=Theories, methods and tools in program comprehension: Past, present and future , date=2005-05-15 , title=13th International Workshop on Program Comprehension (IWPC'05) , chapter-url=https://doi.org/10.1109/WPC.2005.38 , series=IWPC '05 , location=USA , publisher=IEEE Computer Society , pages=181–191 , doi=10.1109/WPC.2005.38 , isbn=978-0-7695-2254-8]
Software maintenance tasks have five categories: adaptive maintenance,
corrective maintenance, perfective maintenance,
code reuse, and code leverage.
Theories of program comprehension
Titles of works on program comprehension include
* ''Using a behavioral theory of program comprehension in software engineering''
* ''The concept assignment problem in program understanding'', and
* ''Program Comprehension During Software Maintenance and Evolution''.
Computer scientists pioneering program comprehension include Ruven Brooks, Ted J. Biggerstaff, and Anneliese von Mayrhauser.
See also
*
Program analysis
*
Program slicing
References
Computer programming