Large software projects may typically have components written in different languages. Companies that have a large software codebase may face the issue of applying security, efficiency and quality metrics for a product spanning many languages. A developer or developer organization may choose one language for numerical computation and another for use interface implementation, or they may have inherited or be mandated to work with legacy code in one language while extending functionality with another. While there are many such drivers promoting multilingual codebases, they come with significant software engineering challenges. Although a software development environment might support multiple languages (e.g., Eclipse IDEs) it may leave the language boundaries - language interoperability - opaque. While it may be possible to automatically inspect individual language components of the codebase for software engineering metrics, it may be difficult or impossible to do this on a single accurate description of the complete multilingual codebase.
Heterogeneous or multilingual codebases arise in many cases because software has been developed over a long period by both in-house and external software developers. Libraries for numerical computation may have been constructed in FORTRAN, C and C++ for example, and front-end libraries may have been built in JavaScript.
A multilingual codebase gives rise to many software engineering issues, including:
-- (c) Fordham University Robotics and Computer Vision
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