+1 for the completion of framework (spec) constructs.

https://tabnine.com/blog/deep

On Thu, Aug 15, 2019, 12:33 Tudor Girba <tu...@tudorgirba.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> It certainly would be interesting!
>
> The other thing to look for are completion of larger constructs. For
> example, in the context of Spec, I am sure you can complete larger
> templates for various methods.
>
> Cheers,
> Doru
>
>
>
> > On Aug 15, 2019, at 8:48 AM, ducasse <steph...@netcourrier.com> wrote:
> >
> > hello miroslava
> >
> > you take a NLP approach and I do not know if it will be working
> > Now people like proksch and mezini took a statiscal approach.
> > I would really like to see if we can apply the same technics to Pharo
> completion and
> > measure the difference. It could be a really nice master (even from a
> data scientist point of view)
> >
> > <Recommander-a3-proksch.pdf>
> >
> >> On 15 Aug 2019, at 00:01, Myroslava Romaniuk <roman...@ucu.edu.ua>
> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> From: Myroslava Romaniuk <roman...@ucu.edu.ua>
> >> Subject: machine learning for code completion
> >> Date: 15 August 2019 at 00:01:23 CEST
> >> To: Pharo Development List <pharo-dev@lists.pharo.org>
> >>
> >>
> >> for anyone interested, made a blog post about researching some of the
> existing approaches of combining ML to improve code completion. in pharo we
> want to try training the n-gram model. have a slight idea of how it might
> be implemented in practice but mostly still trying to figure it out, so if
> anyone else has some suggestions/ideas/tips that would be great
> >>
> >> link for the blog post :
> https://medium.com/@myroslavarm/machine-learning-for-code-completion-2583792997e3
> >>
> >> cheers,
> >> myroslava
> >>
> >>
> >
>
> --
> feenk.com
>
> "Innovation comes in the least expected form.
> That is, if it is expected, it already happened."
>
>
>

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