microsoft / SealPIR
Conditional Complexity

The distribution of complexity of units (measured with McCabe index).

Intro
  • Conditional complexity (also called cyclomatic complexity) is a term used to measure the complexity of software. The term refers to the number of possible paths through a program function. A higher value ofter means higher maintenance and testing costs (infosecinstitute.com).
  • Conditional complexity is calculated by counting all conditions in the program that can affect the execution path (e.g. if statement, loops, switches, and/or operators, try and catch blocks...).
  • Conditional complexity is measured at the unit level (methods, functions...).
  • Units are classified in four categories based on the measured McCabe index: 1-5 (simple units), 6-10 (medium complex units), 11-25 (complex units), 26+ (very complex units).
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Conditional Complexity Overall
  • There are 34 units with 716 lines of code in units (82.5% of code).
    • 0 very complex units (0 lines of code)
    • 0 complex units (0 lines of code)
    • 1 medium complex units (87 lines of code)
    • 7 simple units (264 lines of code)
    • 26 very simple units (365 lines of code)
0% | 0% | 12% | 36% | 50%
Legend:
51+
26-50
11-25
6-10
1-5
Alternative Visuals
Conditional Complexity per Extension
51+
26-50
11-25
6-10
1-5
cpp0% | 0% | 12% | 36% | 50%
Conditional Complexity per Logical Component
primary logical decomposition
51+
26-50
11-25
6-10
1-5
ROOT0% | 0% | 12% | 36% | 50%
Most Complex Units
Top 20 most complex units
Unit# linesMcCabe index# params
87 18 2
44 7 1
57 7 3
55 7 3
20 6 2
24 6 4
32 6 1
32 6 0
int main()
in main.cpp
70 5 2
14 5 5
27 5 3
31 5 1
24 5 3
27 4 1
32 3 7
16 3 2
9 3 1
9 3 0
7 3 1
15 3 3