SELGPLMLAug 31, 2018

Context2Name: A Deep Learning-Based Approach to Infer Natural Variable Names from Usage Contexts

arXiv:1809.05193v164 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the difficulty of manually inspecting minified code for developers, offering an incremental improvement in efficiency and coverage over existing tools.

The paper tackles the problem of understanding minified JavaScript code by predicting natural variable names from usage contexts, achieving 47.5% accuracy and 2.9 ms average prediction time, with comparable accuracy to state-of-the-art tools and predicting 5.3% additional identifiers.

Most of the JavaScript code deployed in the wild has been minified, a process in which identifier names are replaced with short, arbitrary and meaningless names. Minified code occupies less space, but also makes the code extremely difficult to manually inspect and understand. This paper presents Context2Name, a deep learningbased technique that partially reverses the effect of minification by predicting natural identifier names for minified names. The core idea is to predict from the usage context of a variable a name that captures the meaning of the variable. The approach combines a lightweight, token-based static analysis with an auto-encoder neural network that summarizes usage contexts and a recurrent neural network that predict natural names for a given usage context. We evaluate Context2Name with a large corpus of real-world JavaScript code and show that it successfully predicts 47.5% of all minified identifiers while taking only 2.9 milliseconds on average to predict a name. A comparison with the state-of-the-art tools JSNice and JSNaughty shows that our approach performs comparably in terms of accuracy while improving in terms of efficiency. Moreover, Context2Name complements the state-of-the-art by predicting 5.3% additional identifiers that are missed by both existing tools.

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