A tool to visualise code complexity in a project and help direct refactoring efforts.
Inspired by Michael Feathers' article "Getting Empirical about Refactoring" and the gem turbulence by Chad Fowler and others.
This gem currently supports analysis of Java, Ruby, JavaScript, and TypeScript repositories, but it can easily be extended.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'churn_vs_complexity'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install churn_vs_complexity
This gem depends on git for churn analysis.
Complexity analysis for Java relies on PMD. In order to use the --java
flag, you must first install PMD manually, and the gem assumes it is available on the search path as pmd
. On macOS, for example, you can install it using homebrew with brew install pmd
.
Complexity analysis for JavaScript and TypeScript relies on ESLint. In order to use the --js
, --ts
, --javascript
, or --typescript
flag, you must have Node.js installed.
Execute the churn_vs_complexity
with the applicable arguments. Output in the requested format will be directed to stdout.
Usage: churn_vs_complexity [options] folder
--java Check complexity of java classes
--ruby Check complexity of ruby files
--js, --ts, --javascript, --typescript
Check complexity of javascript and typescript files
--csv Format output as CSV
--graph Format output as HTML page with Churn vs Complexity graph
--summary Output summary statistics (mean and median) for churn and complexity
--excluded PATTERN Exclude file paths including this string. Can be used multiple times.
--since YYYY-MM-DD Normal mode: Calculate churn after this date. Timetravel mode: calculate summaries from this date
-m, --month Calculate churn for the month leading up to the most recent commit
-q, --quarter Calculate churn for the quarter leading up to the most recent commit
-y, --year Calculate churn for the year leading up to the most recent commit
--timetravel N Calculate summary for all commits at intervals of N days throughout project history or from the date specified with --since
--delta SHA Identify changes between the specified commit (SHA) and the previous commit and annotate changed files with complexity score. SHA can be a full or short commit hash, or the value HEAD. Can be used multiple times to specify multiple commits.
--dry-run Echo the chosen options from the CLI
-h, --help Display help
--version Display version
Note that when using the --timetravel
mode, the semantics of some flags are subtly different from normal mode:
--since YYYY-MM-DD
: Calculate summaries from this date--month
,--quarter
,--year
: Calculate churn for the period leading up to each commit being summarised
Timetravel analysis can take many minutes for old and large repositories.
Summaries in normal mode include a gamma score, which is an unnormalised harmonic mean of churn and complexity. This allows for comparison of summaries across different projects with the same language, or over time for a single project.
Summary points in timetravel mode instead include an alpha score, which is the same harmonic mean of churn and complexity, where churn and complexity values are normalised to a 0-1 range to avoid either churn or complexity dominating the score. The summary points also include a beta score, which is the geometric mean of the normalised churn and complexity values.
churn_vs_complexity --ruby --csv my_ruby_project > ~/Desktop/ruby-demo.csv
churn_vs_complexity --java --graph --exclude generated-sources --exclude generated-test-sources --since 2023-01-01 my_java_project > ~/Desktop/java-demo.html
churn_vs_complexity --ruby --summary -m my_ruby_project >> ~/Desktop/monthly-report.txt
churn_vs_complexity --java -m --since 2019-03-01 --timetravel 30 --graph my_java_project > ~/Desktop/timetravel-after-1st-march-2019.html
churn_vs_complexity --delta 1496402e81e68e86c5ac240559099fbe581a9a2g --delta 2845296758861773778d70d96328a5f2a1a9e933 --js --summary my_javascript_project > ~/Desktop/interesting-commits.txt
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/beatmadsen/churn_vs_complexity.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.