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The Readability Spectrum: Patterns, Issues, and Prompt Effects in LLM-Generated Code

arXiv:2605.1328013.7
Predicted impact top 49% in SE · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For software engineers and researchers, it reveals that while LLM code readability matches human code, distinct issues and limited prompt effectiveness indicate latent technical debt needing future work.

The paper investigates readability of LLM-generated code compared to human-written code across 5,869 scenarios, finding comparable overall readability but distinct issue patterns; prompt design has limited impact on readability.

As Large Language Models (LLMs) are transforming software development, the functional quality of generated code has become a central focus, leaving readability, one of critical non-functional attributes, understudied. Given that LLM-generated code still needs human review before adoption, it is important to understand its readability especially compared with human-written code and the role of prompt design in shaping it. We therefore set out to conduct a systematic investigation into the code readability of LLM-generated code. To systematically quantify code readability, We establish a comprehensive readability model that synthesizes textual, structural, program, and visual features of code. Based on the model, we evaluate the readability of code generated by the mainstream LLMs under 5,869 scenarios extracted from large code base including World of Code (WoC) and LeetCode. We find that current LLMs produce code with overall readability comparable to human-written code, but displaying distinct readability issue patterns. We further examine how different prompt dimensions affect the readability of LLM-generated code, and find that function signatures, constraints and style descriptions emerge as the most influential factors, while the overall impact of prompt design remains limited. Our findings indicate that, on one hand, LLM-generated code is at least comparable to human-written code in readability, validating its potential for systematic integration into software workflows from a non-functional perspective; on the other hand, distinct readability issue patterns and limited effectiveness of prompt engineering reveal a latent technical debt, highlighting the need for future research to improve the readability of LLM-generated code and thus ensure long-term maintainability.

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