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CHI
2010
ACM

Evaluating cues for resuming interrupted programming tasks

13 years 11 months ago
Evaluating cues for resuming interrupted programming tasks
Developers, like all modern knowledge workers, are frequently interrupted and blocked in their tasks. In this paper we present a contextual inquiry into developers’ current strategies for resuming interrupted tasks and investigate the effect of automated cues on improving task resumption. We surveyed 371 programmers on the nature of their tasks, interruptions, task suspension and resumption strategies and found that they rely heavily on note-taking across several types of media. We then ran a controlled lab study to compare the effects of two different automated cues to note taking when resuming interrupted programming tasks. The two cues differed in (1) whether activities were summarized in aggregate or presented chronologically and (2) whether activities were presented as program symbols or as code snippets. Both cues performed well: developers using either cue completed their tasks with twice the success rate as those using note-taking alone. Despite the similar performance of th...
Chris Parnin, Robert DeLine
Added 17 May 2010
Updated 17 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where CHI
Authors Chris Parnin, Robert DeLine
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