scholarly journals Does BLEU Score Work for Code Migration?

Author(s):  
Ngoc Tran ◽  
Hieu Tran ◽  
Son Nguyen ◽  
Hoan Nguyen ◽  
Tien Nguyen
Keyword(s):  
2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (5) ◽  
pp. 249-254
Author(s):  
Alex de V. Garcia ◽  
Edward Hermann Haeusler
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Pete Cooper ◽  
Uwe Dolinsky ◽  
Alastair F. Donaldson ◽  
Andrew Richards ◽  
Colin Riley ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Faye Borthick ◽  
Paul L. Bowen

This simulation affords an opportunity for learning to audit system development for an accounting application. The simulation responds to the growing emphasis on controlling system development for complying with the internal control assurance requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (U.S. House of Representatives). Because of the lack of detailed accounting standards for vendor incentives, learners have to construct a working definition of “systematic and rational” allocation of incentives in order to develop audit objectives and procedures. In the simulation, learners (1) develop objectives for auditing the specific project of migration of legacy code for vendor incentives and the system development for a group of projects, (2) design audit procedures to achieve the audit objectives, (3) execute the audit procedures by querying the databases, and (4) communicate objectives, procedures, and results in a report. The simulation is staged with conversations among audit staff members and the company's system development manager, databases containing application test data and program library transactions, and readiness questions. Although the databases are supplied in the form of Microsoft Access® files, the simulation can be worked with any database query tool. The simulation helps learners develop their capabilities for designing audit objectives and procedures for testing system development and for querying databases.


Author(s):  
Makoto Yoshida ◽  
Kazumine Kojima

Large scale loosely coupled PCs can organize clusters and form desktop computing grids on sharing each processing power; power of PCs, transaction distributions, network scales, network delays, and code migration algorithms characterize the performance of the computing grids. This article describes the design methodologies of workload management in distributed desktop computing grids. Based on the code migration experiments, transfer policy for computation was determined and several simulations for location policies were examined, and the design methodologies for distributed desktop computing grids are derived from the simulation results. The language for distributed desktop computing is designed to accomplish the design methodologies.


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