Automated Test Generation for Scratch Programs
February 13, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Empirical Software Engineering
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Authors
Adina Deiner, Patric Feldmeier, Gordon Fraser, Sebastian Schweikl, Wengran Wang
arXiv ID
2202.06274
Category
cs.SE: Software Engineering
Citations
23
Venue
Empirical Software Engineering
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
The importance of programming education has lead to dedicated educational programming environments, where users visually arrange block-based programming constructs that typically control graphical, interactive game-like programs. The Scratch programming environment is particularly popular, with more than 70 million registered users at the time of this writing. While the block-based nature of Scratch helps learners by preventing syntactical mistakes, there nevertheless remains a need to provide feedback and support in order to implement desired functionality. To support individual learning and classroom settings, this feedback and support should ideally be provided in an automated fashion, which requires tests to enable dynamic program analysis. The Whisker framework enables automated testing of Scratch programs, but creating these automated tests for Scratch programs is challenging. In this paper, we therefore investigate how to automatically generate Whisker tests. This raises important challenges: First, game-like programs are typically randomised, leading to flaky tests. Second, Scratch programs usually consist of animations and interactions with long delays, inhibiting the application of classical test generation approaches. Evaluation on common programming exercises, a random sample of 1000 Scratch user programs, and the 1000 most popular Scratch programs demonstrates that our approach enables Whisker to reliably accelerate test executions, and even though many Scratch programs are small and easy to cover, there are many unique challenges for which advanced search-based test generation using many-objective algorithms is needed in order to achieve high coverage.
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