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  1. Proceedings of the 7th European software engineering conference held jointly with the 7th ACM SIGSOFT international symposium on Foundations of software engineering (ESEC/FSE-7)
  2. An efficient relevant slicing method for debugging
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Extreme programming: a discipline of software development (invited paper) (abstract only)
Components and generative programming (invited paper)
A component and communication model for push systems
A fine-grained model for code mobility
Robots: a real-time systems architectural style
Collaboration and composition: issues for a second generation process language
Using UML for software process modeling
A probabilistic model for software projects
Designing specification languages for process control systems: lessons learned and steps to the future
Using model checking to generate tests from requirements specifications
Specification-based prototyping for embedded systems
Coping with type casts in C
Efficient points-to analysis for whole-program analysis
The concept of dynamic analysis
Data-flow analysis of program fragments
Yesterday, my program worked. Today, it does not. Why?
Comparison checking: an approach to avoid debugging of optimized code
Structural specification-based testing: automated support and experimental evaluation
An efficient relevant slicing method for debugging
Analyzing exception flow in Java programs
An efficient algorithm for computing MHP information for concurrent Java programs
CoffeeStrainer: statically-checked constraints on the definition and use of types in Java
The CIP method: component- and model-based construction of embedded systems
Algebraic software architecture reconfiguration
Consistency checking for multiple view software architectures
Synergy between component-based and generative approaches
Transitioning legacy assets to a product line architecture
CHIME: a metadata-based distributed software development environment
FACADE: a typed intermediate language dedicated to smart cards
Verification of real-time designs: combining scheduling theory with automatic formal verification
Checking progress with action priority: is it fair?

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An efficient relevant slicing method for debugging

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Beszédes, Árpád Gyimóthy, Tibor Forgács, Istán
Abstract Dynamic program slicing methods are widely used for debugging, because many statements can be ignored in the process of localizing a bug. A dynamic program slice with respect to a variable contains only those statements that actually had an influence on this variable. However, during debugging we also need to identify those statements that actually did not affect the variable but could have affected it had they been evaluated differently. A relevant slice includes these potentially affecting statements as well, therefore it is appropriate for debugging. In this paper a forward algorithm is introduced for the computation of relevant slices of programs. The space requirement of this method does not depend on the number of different dynamic slices nor on the size of the execution history, hence it can be applied for real size applications.
Starting Page 303
Ending Page 321
Page Count 19
File Format PDF
ISBN 3540665382
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 1999-10-01
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword Debugging Relevant slicing Dynamic slicing
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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