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Autores principales: Predoaia, Ionut, Harbin, James, Gerasimou, Simos, Vasiliou, Christina, Kolovos, Dimitris, García-Domínguez, Antonio
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.05846
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author Predoaia, Ionut
Harbin, James
Gerasimou, Simos
Vasiliou, Christina
Kolovos, Dimitris
García-Domínguez, Antonio
author_facet Predoaia, Ionut
Harbin, James
Gerasimou, Simos
Vasiliou, Christina
Kolovos, Dimitris
García-Domínguez, Antonio
contents Tree-based model editors and hybrid graphical-textual model editors have advantages and limitations when editing domain models. Data is displayed hierarchically in tree-based model editors, whereas hybrid graphical-textual model editors capture high-level domain concepts graphically and low-level domain details textually. We conducted an empirical user study with 22 participants to evaluate the implicit assumption of system modellers that hybrid notations are superior, and to investigate the tradeoffs between the default EMF-based tree model editor and a Sirius/Xtext-based hybrid model editor. The results of the user study indicate that users largely prefer the hybrid editor and are more confident with hybrid notations for understanding the meaning of conditions. Furthermore, we found that the tree editor provided superior performance for analysing ordered lists of model elements, whereas activities requiring the comprehension or modelling of complex conditions were carried out faster through the hybrid editor.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2404_05846
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Tree-Based versus Hybrid Graphical-Textual Model Editors: An Empirical Study of Testing Specifications
Predoaia, Ionut
Harbin, James
Gerasimou, Simos
Vasiliou, Christina
Kolovos, Dimitris
García-Domínguez, Antonio
Software Engineering
Tree-based model editors and hybrid graphical-textual model editors have advantages and limitations when editing domain models. Data is displayed hierarchically in tree-based model editors, whereas hybrid graphical-textual model editors capture high-level domain concepts graphically and low-level domain details textually. We conducted an empirical user study with 22 participants to evaluate the implicit assumption of system modellers that hybrid notations are superior, and to investigate the tradeoffs between the default EMF-based tree model editor and a Sirius/Xtext-based hybrid model editor. The results of the user study indicate that users largely prefer the hybrid editor and are more confident with hybrid notations for understanding the meaning of conditions. Furthermore, we found that the tree editor provided superior performance for analysing ordered lists of model elements, whereas activities requiring the comprehension or modelling of complex conditions were carried out faster through the hybrid editor.
title Tree-Based versus Hybrid Graphical-Textual Model Editors: An Empirical Study of Testing Specifications
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.05846