J
John J. Jordan
Hello,
My name is John Jordan and I am a researcher in the Computer Science
Division at the University of California, Berkeley. Under the
supervision of Professor Susan L. Graham, I have developed a tool that
enables programmers to compose and modify code with fewer keystrokes,
with the goals of speeding up coding and helping those with RSI. The
tool is written for Java and in the form of an Eclipse plugin. I would
like to invite you to take part in a survey intended to evaluate the
usefulness of this tool.
The survey is online and will take approximately 10 minutes. During the
survey, you will be asked a few questions about your habits and
experiences with programming tasks.
If you have any questions about the survey, you may contact me by
e-mail: (e-mail address removed).
If you have any question regarding your treatment or rights as a
participant in this research project, please contact the University of
California at Berkeley's Committee for Protection of Human Subjects at
(510) 642-7461 or (e-mail address removed).
The survey is online at http://sequoia.cs.berkeley.edu/survey/
Thank you,
John J. Jordan
Harmonia Research Project
Computer Science Division
University of California, Berkeley
My name is John Jordan and I am a researcher in the Computer Science
Division at the University of California, Berkeley. Under the
supervision of Professor Susan L. Graham, I have developed a tool that
enables programmers to compose and modify code with fewer keystrokes,
with the goals of speeding up coding and helping those with RSI. The
tool is written for Java and in the form of an Eclipse plugin. I would
like to invite you to take part in a survey intended to evaluate the
usefulness of this tool.
The survey is online and will take approximately 10 minutes. During the
survey, you will be asked a few questions about your habits and
experiences with programming tasks.
If you have any questions about the survey, you may contact me by
e-mail: (e-mail address removed).
If you have any question regarding your treatment or rights as a
participant in this research project, please contact the University of
California at Berkeley's Committee for Protection of Human Subjects at
(510) 642-7461 or (e-mail address removed).
The survey is online at http://sequoia.cs.berkeley.edu/survey/
Thank you,
John J. Jordan
Harmonia Research Project
Computer Science Division
University of California, Berkeley