Code Smells for Machine Learning Applications

March 25, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› 2022 IEEE/ACM 1st International Conference on AI Engineering – Software Engineering for AI (CAIN)

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Authors Haiyin Zhang, LuΓ­s Cruz, Arie van Deursen arXiv ID 2203.13746 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Cross-listed cs.AI Citations 37 Venue 2022 IEEE/ACM 1st International Conference on AI Engineering – Software Engineering for AI (CAIN) Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
The popularity of machine learning has wildly expanded in recent years. Machine learning techniques have been heatedly studied in academia and applied in the industry to create business value. However, there is a lack of guidelines for code quality in machine learning applications. In particular, code smells have rarely been studied in this domain. Although machine learning code is usually integrated as a small part of an overarching system, it usually plays an important role in its core functionality. Hence ensuring code quality is quintessential to avoid issues in the long run. This paper proposes and identifies a list of 22 machine learning-specific code smells collected from various sources, including papers, grey literature, GitHub commits, and Stack Overflow posts. We pinpoint each smell with a description of its context, potential issues in the long run, and proposed solutions. In addition, we link them to their respective pipeline stage and the evidence from both academic and grey literature. The code smell catalog helps data scientists and developers produce and maintain high-quality machine learning application code.
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