JDepend Metrics Report

The following document contains the results of a JDepend metric analysis. The various metrics are defined at the bottom of this document.

Summary

Package TC CC AC Ca Ce A I D Cycles package-info
com.reallifedeveloper.jdepend_maven_plugin 1 1 0 0 4 0% 100% 0% false false
com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend 2 2 0 0 5 0% 100% 0% false true
com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml 7 7 0 1 4 0% 80% 20% false true

Packages

com.reallifedeveloper.jdepend_maven_plugin

Abstract Classes

-

Concrete Classes

  • com.reallifedeveloper.jdepend_maven_plugin.HelpMojo

Used by Packages

-

Uses Packages

  • org.apache.maven.plugin
  • org.apache.maven.plugin.logging
  • org.w3c.dom
  • org.xml.sax

Cycles

There are no cyclic dependencies.

com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend

Abstract Classes

-

Concrete Classes

  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.JDependReport
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.JDependReportRenderer

Used by Packages

-

Uses Packages

  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml
  • jdepend.xmlui
  • org.apache.maven.doxia.sink
  • org.apache.maven.plugin.logging
  • org.apache.maven.reporting

Cycles

There are no cyclic dependencies.

com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml

Abstract Classes

-

Concrete Classes

  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.StringTrimmingXmlAdapter
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReport
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReport$XmlClass
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReport$XmlPackage
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReport$XmlPackageWithCycle
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReport$XmlStats
  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend.xml.XmlReportParser

Used by Packages

  • com.reallifedeveloper.maven.jdepend

Uses Packages

  • jakarta.xml.bind
  • jakarta.xml.bind.annotation
  • jakarta.xml.bind.annotation.adapters
  • jakarta.xml.bind.helpers

Cycles

There are no cyclic dependencies.

Explanation

The following explanations are for quick reference and are lifted directly from the original JDepend documentation. For more information, see the Wikipedia page.

Term Description
Number of Classes (TC, CC, AC) The number of concrete and abstract classes (and interfaces) in the package is an indicator of the extensibility of the package.
Afferent Couplings (Ca) The number of incoming dependencies, i.e., other packages that depend upon classes within the package. This is an indicator of the package's responsibility.
Efferent Couplings (Ce) The number of outgoing dependencies, i.e., other packages that the classes in the package depend upon. This is an indicator of the package's independence.
Abstractness (A) The ratio of the number of abstract classes (and interfaces) in the analyzed package to the total number of classes in the analyzed package. The range for this metric is 0 to 1, with A=0 indicating a completely concrete package and A=1 indicating a completely abstract package.
Instability (I) The ratio of efferent coupling (Ce) to total coupling (Ce / (Ce + Ca)). This metric is an indicator of the package's resilience to change. The range for this metric is 0 to 1, with I=0 indicating a completely stable package and I=1 indicating a completely instable package.
Distance (D) The perpendicular distance of a package from the idealized line A + I = 1. This metric is an indicator of the package's balance between abstractness and stability. A package squarely on the main sequence is optimally balanced with respect to its abstractness and stability. Ideal packages are either completely abstract and stable (x=0, y=1) or completely concrete and instable (x=1, y=0). The range for this metric is 0 to 1, with D=0 indicating a package that is coincident with the main sequence and D=1 indicating a package that is as far from the main sequence as possible.
Cycles Packages participating in a package dependency cycle are in a deadly embrace with respect to reusability and their release cycle. Package dependency cycles can be easily identified by reviewing the textual reports of dependency cycles. Once these dependency cycles have been identified with JDepend, they can be broken by employing various object-oriented techniques.
Package Info A flag showing if there is a package-info class in the package. This is useful for package-level documentation, as well as being a home for package-level annotations.