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Main Authors: Si, Yuan, Wang, Ming, Li, Daming, Shi, Hanyuan, Zhang, Jialu
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.29624
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author Si, Yuan
Wang, Ming
Li, Daming
Shi, Hanyuan
Zhang, Jialu
author_facet Si, Yuan
Wang, Ming
Li, Daming
Shi, Hanyuan
Zhang, Jialu
contents Scratch is the most popular programming environment for novices, with over 1.15 billion projects created worldwide. Unlike traditional languages, correctness in Scratch is defined by visible behavior on the stage rather than by code structure alone, so programs that appear correct in the workspace can still fail at runtime due to timing, event ordering, or cross-sprite interactions. Visual execution evidence such as gameplay videos can therefore be essential for diagnosis and repair. However, capturing and processing this evidence inside an automated repair loop introduces substantial overhead. Probing execution, recording stage behavior, rebuilding executable .sb3 projects, and verifying candidate fixes consume time, monetary cost, and resources across an entire repair trajectory rather than a single model call. We present EcoScratch, a repair pipeline that uses lightweight runtime signals to decide whether the next attempt stays text-only or escalates to multimodal prompting. The controller also sets the JSON Patch budget and verification effort, so evidence choice and repair budget are coupled inside the same decision. EcoScratch rebuilds candidate fixes into executable .sb3 projects and records per-trajectory traces, monetary cost, local-runtime energy. We evaluate 12 models on 100 executable Scratch repair projects under four controller settings, yielding 4800 repair trajectories. In this matrix, a selective multimodal policy gives the strongest observed success-cost-energy tradeoff. It reaches the highest generation success (30.3%) while using less average cost and local-runtime energy than the two non-adaptive multimodal baselines under the same bounded trajectory budget; text-only remains the lowest-cost floor. Across the evaluated matrix, multimodal evidence helps most when it is used to control escalation within a bounded trajectory budget rather than applied uniformly.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_29624
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle EcoScratch: Cost-Effective Multimodal Repair for Scratch Using Execution Feedback
Si, Yuan
Wang, Ming
Li, Daming
Shi, Hanyuan
Zhang, Jialu
Software Engineering
Scratch is the most popular programming environment for novices, with over 1.15 billion projects created worldwide. Unlike traditional languages, correctness in Scratch is defined by visible behavior on the stage rather than by code structure alone, so programs that appear correct in the workspace can still fail at runtime due to timing, event ordering, or cross-sprite interactions. Visual execution evidence such as gameplay videos can therefore be essential for diagnosis and repair. However, capturing and processing this evidence inside an automated repair loop introduces substantial overhead. Probing execution, recording stage behavior, rebuilding executable .sb3 projects, and verifying candidate fixes consume time, monetary cost, and resources across an entire repair trajectory rather than a single model call. We present EcoScratch, a repair pipeline that uses lightweight runtime signals to decide whether the next attempt stays text-only or escalates to multimodal prompting. The controller also sets the JSON Patch budget and verification effort, so evidence choice and repair budget are coupled inside the same decision. EcoScratch rebuilds candidate fixes into executable .sb3 projects and records per-trajectory traces, monetary cost, local-runtime energy. We evaluate 12 models on 100 executable Scratch repair projects under four controller settings, yielding 4800 repair trajectories. In this matrix, a selective multimodal policy gives the strongest observed success-cost-energy tradeoff. It reaches the highest generation success (30.3%) while using less average cost and local-runtime energy than the two non-adaptive multimodal baselines under the same bounded trajectory budget; text-only remains the lowest-cost floor. Across the evaluated matrix, multimodal evidence helps most when it is used to control escalation within a bounded trajectory budget rather than applied uniformly.
title EcoScratch: Cost-Effective Multimodal Repair for Scratch Using Execution Feedback
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.29624