VL/HCC 2022
Mon 12 - Fri 16 September 2022 Rome, Italy
Thu 15 Sep 2022 10:30 - 15:30 at Corridor of San Francesco Room - Poster Presentation

Notebooks are increasingly popular programming tools adopted by a diverse range of users, including professional and novice users, from various fields not necessarily skilled in software engineering, to experiment with programming and develop software. Notebooks are often used within interactive and exploratory programming settings; however, some of their main use cases are not naturally supported by their design. For example, users can only get insights into the program’s state by executing program fragments and updating one’s mental model. This paper discusses the possibility of defining widgets to improve notebooks by providing direct insights into the program state. The widgets are developed upon previous work in which a novel approach to incremental programming is suggested based on the notion of an exploring interpreter. As example, we present widgets for visualizing execution history and variable assignments, thereby reducing the cognitive load on users.

Thu 15 Sep

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

10:30 - 15:30
Poster PresentationPosters and Showpieces / Graduate Consortium at Corridor of San Francesco Room

Authors will attend only during breaks.

10:30
5h
Poster
Making the Invisible Visible in Computational NotebooksPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Mauricio Verano Merino Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, L. Thomas van Binsbergen University of Amsterdam, Mazyar Seraj Eindhoven University of Technology
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
A technique to improve text editing on smartphonesPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Maria Giovanna Albanese Dipartimento di Informatica, Università di Salerno, Gennaro Costagliola Università di Salerno, Mattia De Rosa University of Salerno, Vittorio Fuccella University of Salerno
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Chaldene: Towards Visual Programming Image Processing in Jupyter NotebooksPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Fei Chen , Philipp Slusallek German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, Saarland University, Martin Muller Saarland University, Tim Dahmen German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Feasibility of using YouTube Conversations for Pair Programming Intent ClassificationPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Jacob Hart University of Tulsa, Jake AuBuchon University of Tulsa, Sandeep Kuttal The University of Tulsa
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Evaluating Gender Bias in Pair Programming Conversations with an AgentPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Alex McAuliffe The University of Tulsa, Jacob Hart University of Tulsa, Sandeep Kuttal The University of Tulsa
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Estimating Foraging Values and Costs in Stack OverflowPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Abim Sedhain The University of Tulsa, Sruti Srinivasa Ragavan Microsoft Research; School of EECS, Oregon State University, Brett McKinney The University of Tulsa, Sandeep Kuttal The University of Tulsa
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Information Seeking Behavior for Bugs on GitHub: An Information Foraging PerspectivePoster
Posters and Showpieces
Abim Sedhain The University of Tulsa, Sandeep Kuttal The University of Tulsa
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Developers’ Foraging Behavior on Stack OverflowPoster
Posters and Showpieces
Vaishvi Diwanji The University of Tulsa, Abim Sedhain The University of Tulsa, Grey Bodi The University of Tulsa, Sandeep Kuttal The University of Tulsa
DOI
10:30
5h
Poster
Which Technologies are Most Frequently Used by Data Scientists?Poster
Posters and Showpieces
Paula Pereira University of Minho, João Paulo Fernandes LIACC, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal, Jácome Cunha University of Porto
DOI
10:30
5h
Tools for Creating UI Automation MacrosGC Poster
Graduate Consortium
Rebecca Krosnick University of Michigan
DOI