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VL
2003
IEEE

End-user programming as translation: an experimental framework and study

13 years 9 months ago
End-user programming as translation: an experimental framework and study
One of the reputed advantages of end-user programming languages is that they support a given problem doh a set of programming abstractions that are “just right” for the end-users who need to program within that domain. Green and Petre’s [1] Cognitive Dimensions Framework accounts for this advantage in terms of the “closeness of mapping” dimension: the closer the programming domain is to the problem domain, the easier the programming task. This suggests that programming might be conceptualized as a process of translation, with “close” translations being more efficient and error-free than “distant” ones. While there appears to be a strong intuitive basis for this view, there presently exists little direct empirical evidence. To that end, we present an experimental framework for systematically exploring the “closeness of mapping” dimension within the programming domain of college-level textbook algorithms and data structures. A pilot study we conducted within that f...
Christopher D. Hundhausen, Ravikiran Vatrapu, Josh
Added 05 Jul 2010
Updated 05 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where VL
Authors Christopher D. Hundhausen, Ravikiran Vatrapu, Joshua Wingstrom
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