An effective and efficient encoding of the source code of a computer program is critical to the success of sequence-to-sequence deep neural network models for code representation learning. In this study, we propose to use the Prufer sequence of the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) of a computer program to design a sequential representation scheme that preserves the structural information in an AST. Our representation makes it possible to develop deep-learning models in which signals carried by lexical tokens in the training examples can be exploited automatically and selectively based on their syntactic role and importance. Unlike other recently-proposed approaches, our representation is concise and lossless in terms of the structural information of the AST. Results from our experiment show that prufer-sequence-based representation is indeed highly effective and efficient.
An effective and efficient encoding of the source code of a computer program is critical to the success of sequence-to-sequence deep neural network models for tasks in computer program comprehension, such as automated code summarization and documentation. A significant challenge is to find a sequential representation that captures the structural/syntactic information in a computer program and facilitates the training of the learning models. In this paper, we propose to use the Prüfer sequence of the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) of a computer program to design a sequential representation scheme that preserves the structural information in an AST. Our representation makes it possible to develop deep-learning models in which signals carried by lexical tokens in the training examples can be exploited automatically and selectively based on their syntactic role and importance. Unlike other recently-proposed approaches, our representation is concise and lossless in terms of the structural information of the AST. Empirical studies on real-world benchmark datasets, using a sequenceto-sequence learning model we designed for code summarization, show that our Prüfer-sequence-based representation is indeed highly effective and efficient, outperforming significantly all the recently-proposed deeplearning models we used as the baseline models.
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