All,
i think there might be similar patterns: "x & !y", "!x | y", "x | !y" ?
Well, (!x & y) and (!x | y) are probably the two that might have been
intended otherwise. (x & !y), (x | !y) are probably ok.
i think the proper intention in the latter cases is (x & ~y) and
(x | ~y).
My strong bet is that in 99% of the cases they are real bugs and && or
|| was intended.
Developer knowledge of operator precedence and the issue of what
they intended to write are interesting topics. Some experimental
work is described in (binary operators only I'm afraid):
www.knosof.co.uk/cbook/accu06a.pdf
www.knosof.co.uk/cbook/accu07a.pdf
The ACCU 2006 experiment provides evidence that developer knowledge
is proportional to the number of occurrences of a construct in
source code, it also shows a stunningly high percentage of incorrect
answers.
The ACCU 2007 experiment provides evidence that the names of the
operands has a significant impact on operator precedence choice.
I wonder what kind of names are used as the operand of unary
operators?
I would expect the ~ operator to have a bitwise name, but the
! operator might have an arithmetic or bitwise name.
--
Derek M. Jones tel: +44 (0) 1252 520 667
Knowledge Software Ltd mailto:derek@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Applications Standards Conformance Testing http://www.knosof.co.uk
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