Absolute Complexity
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Binary Decisions divided by the number of statements.
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Binary Decisions
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Number of branching conditions in the flow graph with two possible outcomes. Includes statements with implicit condition evaluation
(loops, AT END, and so on).
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Catch Clauses
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Number of catch clauses.
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Comments Ratio
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Number of Comments divided by Lines of Code.
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Computational Statements
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Number of statements performing arithmetic calculations.
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Conditional Complexity
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Binary Decisions, plus Unique Operands in Conditions.
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Constructors
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Number of constructors.
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Cyclomatic Complexity
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v(G) = e - n + 2, where v(G) is the cyclomatic complexity of the flow graph (G) for the program in question, e is the number
of edges in G, and n is the number of nodes. Quantity of decision logic. The number of linearly independent paths (minimum
number of paths to be tested). v(G) = DE + 1, where DE is the number of binary decisions made in the program.
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Difficulty
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D = (n1 / 2) * (N2 / n2), where n1 is Unique Operators, N2 is Operands, and n2 is Unique Operands.
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Error Estimate
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B = E**(2/3) / 3000, where E is Programming Effort.
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Essential Complexity
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Quantity of unstructured logic (a loop with an exiting GOTO statement, for example). v(G) for reduced graph without D-structured
primes.
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Executable Statements
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All assignments, function calls (alone on a line), calls, returns, IF, DO, FOR, CHOOSE, EXIT, CONTINUE, and GOTO statements.
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Extended Cyclomatic Complexity
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Cyclomatic Complexity, plus Logical Operators in Conditions. Number of all paths in the program.
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Function Points
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Lines of Code divided by K, where K depends on the language: Cobol=77, Natural=52, PL/I=67. Estimate of the number of end-user
business functions implemented by the program.
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IF Statements
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Number of IF statements.
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Intelligent Content
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I = L * V, where L is Program Level and V is Program Volume. Complexity of a given algorithm independent of the language used
to express the algorithm.
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Lines of Code
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Number of lines of code, plus the number of lines of code in included files and any files they include. Comments and blank
lines are not counted.
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Logical Operators in Conditions
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Number of binary logical operators used in conditions.
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Loop Statements
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Number of repetitively executing statements.
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Maintainability Index
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MI = 171 - 5.2 * ln (PgmVolume) - 0.23 * ExtCycComp - 16.2 * ln (LOC) + 50 * sin (sqrt (2.46 * CommentLines/SourceLines)),
where PgmVolume is Program Volume, ExtCycComp is Extended Cyclomatic Complexity, LOC is Lines of Code, CommentLines is Comment
Lines, and SourceLines is Source Lines.
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Maximum Switch Cases
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Maximum Switch Cases.
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Nested Block Depth
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Maximum nesting of IF, CHOOSE, TRY, DO, SWITCH, or FOR constructs. 1 is added to the depth in the IF and ELSE parts of IF
statements, the bodies of loops, and the code in each case of a Choose statement.
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Number of Comments
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Number of lines of source containing comments, including inline comments placed on lines with statements.
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Operands
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Number of operand occurrences (N2). Operands are variables and literals used in operators. Compare Unique Operands.
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Operators
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Number of operator occurrences (N1). Operators are executable statements and unary and binary operations. Compare Unique Operators.
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Parameters
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Number of parameters in method calls.
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Program Length
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N = N1 + N2, where N1 is Operators and N2 is Operands.
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Program Level
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L = 1 / D, where D is Difficulty.
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Program Volume
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V = N * log2(n), where N is Program Length and n is Vocabulary. Minimum number of bits required to code the program.
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Programming Effort
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E = V / L, where V is Program Volume and L is Program Level. Estimated mental effort required to develop the program.
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Programming Time
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T = E / 18, where E is the Programming Effort and 18 is Stroud’s Number. Estimated amount of time required to implement the
algorithm, in seconds.
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Switch Cases
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Number of SWITCH cases.
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Switch/Choose Statements
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Number of SWITCH in Java, CHOOSE statements. in PowerBuilders.
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Unique Method Calls
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Number of distinct method calls.
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Unique Operands
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Number of distinct operands (n2). Operands are variables and literals used in operators. Uniqueness of literals is determined
by their notation. Compare Operands.
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Unique Operands in Conditions
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Number of distinct operands used in conditions.
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Unique Operators
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Number of distinct operators (n1). Operators are executable statements and unary and binary operations. Compare Operators.
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Vocabulary
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n = n1 + n2, where n1 is the number of Unique Operators and n2 is the number of Unique Operands.
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