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ARCLIN: Automated API Mention Resolution for Unformatted Texts

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arxiv 2201.01459 v2 pith:MGHRXF5I submitted 2022-01-05 cs.SE

ARCLIN: Automated API Mention Resolution for Unformatted Texts

classification cs.SE
keywords mentionsapiswithoutarclinchallengesdevelopersdiscussionsdocuments
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Online technical forums (e.g., StackOverflow) are popular platforms for developers to discuss technical problems such as how to use specific Application Programming Interface (API), how to solve the programming tasks, or how to fix bugs in their codes. These discussions can often provide auxiliary knowledge of how to use the software that is not covered by the official documents. The automatic extraction of such knowledge will support a set of downstream tasks like API searching or indexing. However, unlike official documentation written by experts, discussions in open forums are made by regular developers who write in short and informal texts, including spelling errors or abbreviations. There are three major challenges for the accurate APIs recognition and linking mentioned APIs from unstructured natural language documents to an entry in the API repository: (1) distinguishing API mentions from common words; (2) identifying API mentions without a fully qualified name; and (3) disambiguating API mentions with similar method names but in a different library. In this paper, to tackle these challenges, we propose an ARCLIN tool, which can effectively distinguish and link APIs without using human annotations. Specifically, we first design an API recognizer to automatically extract API mentions from natural language sentences by a Conditional Random Field (CRF) on the top of a Bi-directional Long Short-Term Memory (Bi-LSTM) module, then we apply a context-aware scoring mechanism to compute the mention-entry similarity for each entry in an API repository. Compared to previous approaches with heuristic rules, our proposed tool without manual inspection outperforms by 8% in a high-quality dataset Py-mention, which contains 558 mentions and 2,830 sentences from five popular Python libraries.

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