Object-Oriented Metrics for Quality Improvement of Object-Oriented Software
Mohit Kumar Sharma1, Sandeep Ranjan2, Amardeep Gupta3
1Mohit Kumar Sharma*, Research Scholar, Faculty of Computational Science, GNA University, Phagwara, Punjab, and Assistant Professor (HOD), Computer Science, J.C. D.A.V. College, Dasuya, Punjab, India
2Dr. Sandeep Ranjan, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Computational Science, GNA University, Phagwara, Punjab, India
3Dr. Amardeep Gupta, Principal, J.C. D.A.V. College, Dasuya, Punjab, India
Manuscript received on December 17, 2019. | Revised Manuscript received on December 27, 2019. | Manuscript published on January 10, 2020. | PP: 26-29 | Volume-9 Issue-3, January 2020. | Retrieval Number: B7394129219/2020©BEIESP | DOI: 10.35940/ijitee.B7394.019320
Open Access | Ethics and Policies | Cite | Mendeley
© The Authors. Blue Eyes Intelligence Engineering and Sciences Publication (BEIESP). This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
Abstract: Software metric is a computation of characteristics of a programming applications for quality enhancement. Software metrics are used to access the productivity and efficiency of a software product. These are helpful to understand the technical procedure used to create software. Software metric enables software engineers to assess software quality, software process improvement, monitoring and controlling of software. Object-Oriented Software Development is related to real-world objects and their characteristics creation instead of working in software applications. Class Objects have their own internal data structure, which defines their data and methods. Object-Oriented design restrained all the properties and worth of software that is allied to any large or small project. Object-Oriented metric is a measurement term in which a Object-Oriented Software holds features. These are guidelines that give an indication of the progress that a project has made quality.
Keywords: Object-Oriented Metrics, Quality, Complexity
Scope of the Article: Service Oriented Requirements Engineering