Source code
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In computing, source code, or simply code or source, is human readable plain text that can eventually result in controlling the behavior of a computer. In order to control a computer, it must be processed by a computer program Template:Endash either executed directly via an interpreter or translated into a more computer-consumable form such as via a compiler. Sometimes, code is compiled directly to machine code so that it can be run in the native language of the computer without further processing. But, many modern environments involve compiling to an intermediate representation such as bytecode that can either run via an interpreter or be compiled on-demand to machine code via just-in-time compilation.
Background
The first programmable computers, which appeared at the end of the 1940s,Template:Sfn were programmed in machine language (simple instructions that could be directly executed by the processor). Machine language was difficult to debug and was not portable between different computer systems.Template:Sfn Initially, hardware resources were scarce and expensive, while human resources were cheaper.Template:Sfn As programs grew more complex, programmer productivity became a bottleneck. This led to the introduction of high-level programming languages such as Fortran in the mid-1950s. These languages abstracted away the details of the hardware,and were designed to express algorithms that could be understood more easily by humans.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As instructions distinct from the underlying computer hardware, software is therefore relatively recent, dating to these early high-level programming languages such as Fortran, Lisp, and Cobol.Template:Sfn The invention of high-level programming languages was simultaneous with the compilers needed to translate the source code automatically into machine code that can be directly executed on the computer hardware.Template:Sfn
Source code is the form of code that is modified directly by humans, typically in a high-level programming language. Object code can be directly executed by the machine and is generated automatically from the source code, often via an intermediate step, assembly language. While object code will only work on a specific platform, source code can be ported to a different machine and recompiled there. For the same source code, object code can vary significantly—not only based on the machine for which it is compiled, but also based on performance optimization from the compiler.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Organization
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Software developers often use configuration management to track changes to source code files (version control). The configuration management system also keeps track of which object code file corresponds to which version of the source code file.Template:Sfn
Purposes
Estimation
The number of source lines of code (SLOC) is often used as a metric when evaluating the productivity of computer programmers, the economic value of a code base, effort estimation for projects in development, and the ongoing cost of software maintenance after release.Template:Sfn
Communication
Source code is also used to communicate algorithms between parties, e.g., code snippets online or in books.[2]
Computer programmers can find it helpful to review extant source code to learn about programming techniques.[2] The sharing of source code between developers is often cited as a contributing factor to the maturing of their programming skills.[2] Some consider source code an expressive artistic medium.[3]
Source code often contains comments—blocks of text marked for the compiler to ignore. This content is not part of the program logic, but is instead intended to help readers understand the program.Template:Sfn
Companies often keep the source code confidential in order to hide algorithms considered a trade secret. Proprietary, secret source code and algorithms are widely used for sensitive government applications such as criminal justice, which results in black box behavior with a lack of transparency into the algorithm's methodology. The result is avoidance of public scrutiny of issues such as bias.Template:Sfn
Modification
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Access to the source code (not just the object code) is essential to modifying it.Template:Sfn Understanding extant code is necessary to understand how it worksTemplate:Sfn and before modifying it.[4] The rate of understanding depends both on the code base as well as the skill of the programmer.Template:Sfn Experienced programmers have an easier time understanding what the code does at a high level.Template:Sfn Software visualization is sometimes used to speed up this process.Template:Sfn
Many software programmers use an integrated development environment (IDE) to improve their productivity. IDEs typically have several features built in, including a source-code editor that can alert the programmer to common errors.Template:Sfn Modification often includes code refactoring (improving structure without changing function) and restructuring (improving structure and function simultaneously).Template:Sfn Nearly every change to code introduces new bugs or unexpected ripple effects, which require another round of fixes.[4]
Code reviews by other developers are often used to scrutinize new code added to a project.Template:Sfn The purpose of this phase is often to verify that the code meets style and maintainability standards and that it is a correct implementation of the software design.Template:Sfn According to some estimates, code review dramatically reduce the number of bugs persisting after software testing is complete.Template:Sfn Along with software testing that works by executing the code, static program analysis uses automated tools to detect problems with the source code. Many IDEs support code analysis tools, which might provide metrics on the clarity and maintainability of the code.Template:Sfn Debuggers are tools that often enable programmers to step through execution while keeping track of which source code corresponds to each change of state.Template:Sfn
Compilation and execution
Source code files in a high-level programming language must go through a stage of preprocessing into machine code before the instructions can be carried out.Template:Sfn After being compiled, the program can be saved as an object file and the loader (part of the operating system) can take this saved file and execute it as a process on the computer hardware.Template:Sfn Some programming languages use an interpreter instead of a compiler. An interpreter converts the program into machine code at run time, which makes them 10 to 100 times slower than compiled programming languages.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Portability
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Another reason many programs are distributed in source code form, instead of as executable binary files, is that (often) a single source code file can be written once and will run on a variety of different end-user machines (each with their own localized compiler or interpreter), unlike an executable code file which generally only works on nearly-identical machines. Source code was used this way to distribute the Unix operating system early in the history of Unix, and later to allow programs written in scripting languages (in particular the JavaScript client-side scripting language) to run on a wide variety of machines.
For this goal, minified, obfuscated, or decompiled source code files (all of which eliminate the comments in the original code) are generally just as portable as the original source code files (which nearly always include commments), even though they are far less useful for modification, and therefore don't meet the definition of source code in the GNU General Public License, version 2 (GPL2).
Quality
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Software quality is an overarching term that can refer to a code's correct and efficient behavior, its reusability and portability, or the ease of modification.Template:Sfn It is usually more cost-effective to build quality into a product from the start rather than try to add it later in a development process.Template:Sfn Higher quality code reduces lifetime cost to both suppliers and customers as via higher reliability and maintainability.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Maintainability is the quality of software enabling it to be easily modified without breaking extant functions.Template:Sfn Following coding conventions such as using clear function and variable names that correspond to their purpose makes maintenance easier.Template:Sfn Use of conditional loop statements only if the code could execute more than once, and eliminating code that will never execute can also increase understandability.Template:Sfn Many software development organizations neglect maintainability during the development phase, even though it will increase long-term costs.Template:Sfn Technical debt is incurred when programmers, often out of laziness or urgency to meet a deadline, choose quick and dirty solutions rather than build maintainability into their code.Template:Sfn A common cause is underestimates in software development effort estimation, leading to insufficient resources allocated to development.Template:Sfn A challenge with maintainability is that many software engineering courses do not emphasize it.Template:Sfn Development engineers who know that they will not be responsible for maintaining the software do not have an incentive to build in maintainability.[4]
Copyright and licensing
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The situation varies worldwide, but in the United States before 1974, software and its source code was not copyrightable and therefore always public domain software.[5] In 1974, the US Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works (CONTU) decided that "computer programs, to the extent that they embody an author's original creation, are proper subject matter of copyright".[6][7]
Proprietary software is rarely distributed as source code.Template:Sfn Although the term open-source software literally refers to public access to the source code,Template:Sfn open-source software has additional requirements: free redistribution, permission to modify the source code and release derivative works under the same license, and nondiscrimination between different uses—including commercial use.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The free reusability of open-source software can speed up development.Template:Sfn
See also
- Bytecode
- Code as data
- Coding conventions
- Free software
- Legacy code
- Machine code
- Markup language
- Obfuscated code
- Object code
- Open-source software
- Package manager
- Programming language
- Source code repository
- Syntax highlighting
- Visual programming language
References
Sources
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External links
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b c Spinellis, D: Code Reading: The Open Source Perspective. Addison-Wesley Professional, 2003. Template:ISBN
- ↑ "Art and Computer Programming" ONLamp.com Template:Webarchive, (2005)
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corporation Puts the Byte Back into Copyright Protection for Computer Programs Template:Webarchive in Golden Gate University Law Review Volume 14, Issue 2, Article 3 by Jan L. Nussbaum (January 1984)
- ↑ Lemley, Menell, Merges and Samuelson. Software and Internet Law, p. 34.