It Does What You Say, Not What You Mean: Lessons From A Decade of Program Repair
Created by W.Langdon from
gp-bibliography.bib Revision:1.7970
- @Misc{Weimer:2019:ICSE,
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author = "Westley Weimer and ThanhVu Nguyen and
Claire {Le Goues} and Stephanie Forrest",
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title = "It Does What You Say, Not What You Mean: Lessons From
A Decade of Program Repair",
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howpublished = "ICSE 2019 Plenary Most Inflential Paper",
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year = "2019",
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month = "30 " # may,
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, genetic
improvement, APR",
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URL = "https://conf.researchr.org/profile/icpc-2019/westleyweimer",
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URL = "https://2019.icse-conferences.org/details/icse-2019-Plenary-Sessions/19/It-Does-What-You-Say-Not-What-You-Mean-Lessons-From-A-Decade-of-Program-Repair",
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abstract = "we present lessons learned, good ideas, and thoughts
on the future, with an eye toward informing junior
researchers about the realities and opportunities of a
long-running project. We highlight some notions from
the original paper that stood the test of time, some
that were not as prescient, and some that became more
relevant as industrial practice advanced. We place the
work in context, highlighting perceptions from software
engineering and evolutionary computing, then and now,
of how program repair could possibly work. We discuss
the importance of measurable benchmarks and
reproducible research in bringing scientists together
and advancing the area. We give our thoughts on the
role of quality requirements and properties in program
repair. From testing to metrics to scalability to human
factors to technology transfer, software repair touches
many aspects of software engineering, and we hope a
behind-the-scenes exploration of some of our struggles
and successes may benefit researchers pursuing new
projects.",
-
notes = "\cite{Weimer:2009:ICES}",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Westley Weimer
ThanhVu Nguyen
Claire Le Goues
Stephanie Forrest
Citations