Skip to content

JetBrains-Research/llm-guide-refactorings

Repository files navigation

JetBrains Research Gradle Build

LLMs guide IDE refactorings - Extract Function

Researching collaboration between LLMs and IDEs to perform automated Extract Function refactoring. It combines the power of ChatGPT to provide suggestions about what fragments of code can be extracted from a large function, but leverages the reliability of IntelliJ IDE to carry out correctly the code transformations.

Table of contents

Getting started

  • Sign up for OpenAI at https://beta.openai.com/signup
  • Get your OpenAI API key
  • Go to Settings | Tools | Large Language Models and enter your API key in the "OpenAI Key" field. If you are a member of only one organization, leave the "OpenAI Organization" field empty

ChatGPT communication configuration

The communication with ChatGPT is achieved through OpenAI API. This API is not for free, and it does require a developer key. The configuration is very straight forward, all you need to do is to make sure you have the following environment variables set:

OPENAI_API_KEY
OPENAI_ORGANIZATION

If you forgot to set up your environment variables, when you first try to invoke the Extract Function with ChatGPT, the following popup will appear: openAiAuthFailed .png

From here, you can click on "Configure OpenAI key" and a new configuration window will show as follows: openAiKeyConfig.png

Triggering Extract Function with ChatGPT

To trigger the Extract Function with ChatGPT simply right click inside a function, select Show Context Action -> Extract Function Experiment. This action will automatically select the entire function, including the doc string, and it will form a ChatGPT prompt. When ChatGPT's reply comes back, a popup window is shown with the Extract Function candidates so that the developer can choose any of it (or none).

Here's an example of the GUI showing two Extract Function candidates: efKotlinExample1.png

Note that in the GUI there are two sub-panels. In the first one there's a list of all the candidates (in the example abovre there are two).

This list has two components:

  1. First is the number of lines of code that would be extracted
  2. The name of the new function

Below this list, there's a panel showing the new function's signature. It includes:

  1. The access modifiers (private, public, etc.)
  2. The name of the function
  3. The list of parameters
  4. The return value (if any)
  5. The body of the function is just three dots (...)
  6. The actual code to be extracted is highlighted in the main editor

To invoke the actual extraction, you can choose any of the candidates from the list, and you can either hit Enter, double click, or press the Extract button on the bottom left. If none of the proposed candidates suits your needs, you can dismiss the popup either by hitting the Esc key, or by clicking anywhere outside the popup window.

Telemetry data

Using this plugin for performing Extract Function refactorings will generate telemetry data. This data is going to be used to understand how developers perform Extract Function and what are their "preferences". Before going any further, I would like to clarify one thing right from the start: telemetry data is anonymous, and it's stored only localy on the user's computer.

Telemetry data is collected in a file on the local machine of the developer, under the IntelliJ Idea folder ef_plugin_logs/ef_telemetry_data.log. In my case, the full path is ~/Library/Logs/JetBrains/IntelliJIdea2023.1/ef_plugin_logs/ef_telemetry_data.log. The data in stored in JSON format as in the following example:

{
  "id": "7161cb82-b2d6-48f4-80ac-c93fbb436c65",
  "hostFunctionTelemetryData": {
    "hostFunctionSize": 25,
    "lineStart": 3,
    "lineEnd": 27,
    "bodyLineStart": 14
  },
  "candidatesTelemetryData": {
    "numberOfSuggestions": 2,
    "candidates": [
      {
        "lineStart": 18,
        "lineEnd": 23,
        "candidateType": "AS_IS",
        "applicationResult": "OK",
        "reason": ""
      },
      {
        "lineStart": 25,
        "lineEnd": 25,
        "candidateType": "AS_IS",
        "applicationResult": "OK",
        "reason": ""
      }
    ]
  },
  "userSelectionTelemetryData": {
    "lineStart": 18,
    "lineEnd": 23,
    "functionSize": 6,
    "positionInHostFunction": 4,
    "selectedCandidateIndex": 0,
    "candidateType": "AS_IS",
    "elementsType": [
      {
        "elementType": "PROPERTY",
        "quantity": 1
      },
      {
        "elementType": "FOR",
        "quantity": 1
      }
    ]
  }
}

What telemetry data contains?

This JSON structure contains the following main categories:

  1. Data about the host function:
    • Size of the host function
    • What line does it start/end
  2. Data about the generated suggestions and candidates
    • How many suggestions did ChatGPT had
    • What candidates were produced based on the suggestions
    • Line start/end of the candidate
    • Type of the candidate: AS_IS or ADJUSTED (some ChatGPT suggestions need to be adjusted)
    • Whether the candidate can be extracted or not, and if not, what is the reason
  3. Data about the user selection
  • Which candidate was selected by the developer
  • The size of it, and position in host function
  • What top level elements type does the selection contain (how many FOR loops, IFs, etc.)

What telemetry data does NOT contain?

Collected telemetry data does not contain:

  • Any information about the user
  • Any information about the original functions names
  • Any information about variable names
  • Any information about the file or the project the user works on
  • Any information about the code functionality

Moreover, the telemetry data file or data is not automatically sent anywhere. It exists only on the user's machine, it's in JSON human-readable format, and the choice of sharing this file with the authors belongs solely to the user.

Where to find the telemetry data file?

The file containing the telemetry data described above can be found in the folder where your IntelliJ Idea IDE saves the log files, then look for this path ef_plugin_logs/ef_telemetry_data.log. For example, for me, on a Mac it's in ~/Library/Logs/JetBrains/IntelliJIdea2023.1/ef_plugin_logs/ef_telemetry_data.log.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •