Evaluating Large Language Models in Detecting Test Smells

July 27, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Brazilian Symposium on Software Engineering

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Authors Keila Lucas, Rohit Gheyi, Elvys Soares, MΓ‘rcio Ribeiro, Ivan Machado arXiv ID 2407.19261 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 15 Venue Brazilian Symposium on Software Engineering Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Test smells are coding issues that typically arise from inadequate practices, a lack of knowledge about effective testing, or deadline pressures to complete projects. The presence of test smells can negatively impact the maintainability and reliability of software. While there are tools that use advanced static analysis or machine learning techniques to detect test smells, these tools often require effort to be used. This study aims to evaluate the capability of Large Language Models (LLMs) in automatically detecting test smells. We evaluated ChatGPT-4, Mistral Large, and Gemini Advanced using 30 types of test smells across codebases in seven different programming languages collected from the literature. ChatGPT-4 identified 21 types of test smells. Gemini Advanced identified 17 types, while Mistral Large detected 15 types of test smells. Conclusion: The LLMs demonstrated potential as a valuable tool in identifying test smells.
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