Petr Tsvetkov
In the survey guide, ask participants to not copy-paste summary to the commit message.
64ddd9b
| **Thank you for agreeing to take part!** | |
| In this study, we study how developers interact with | |
| commit message text generated by a LLM. Imagine | |
| that you are in the IDE and writing a | |
| commit message (the changes to the code are shown on the | |
| left). You have generated a message using a LLM. | |
| You can see this generated message on the top right. | |
| However, the message will not necessarily be perfect! | |
| Now, _you need to edit the commit message_ so that it is good enough | |
| to publish to VCS. Please do this directly in the text | |
| box. When you're done, press the "Submit" button: you | |
| will proceed to the next commit and the next generated | |
| message. Please repeat the process for as many commits | |
| as you can. If you are stuck on some commit, feel free to skip it | |
| using the button on the top right. | |
| We understand that the repositories and the commits we show may be | |
| unfamiliar to you. In order to help, we used a LLM to generate a | |
| summary of the commit - you can see the summary by opening the | |
| dropdown right above the commit message edit field. _Please, do not | |
| copy-paste anything from this summary into the commit message._ | |
| During the study, we collect all keystrokes made _in a | |
| text window_, as well as the resulting message. |