Developer(s) | The Sourcetrail Development Team |
---|---|
Stable release | 2021.4.19
|
Repository | https://github.com/CoatiSoftware/Sourcetrail |
Operating system | Multiplatform |
Type | Software quality |
License | GNU General Public License v3.0 |
Sourcetrail was a FOSS source code explorer that provided interactive dependency graphs and support for multiple programming languages including C, C++, Java and Python. [1]
The project was started by Eberhard Gräther after an internship at Google where he worked on Google Chrome, and noticed that he consumed a lot of time (1 month) to implement a simple feature that he expected to be done in 1–2 hours. This was his motivation to develop a tool that helps in understanding the consequences of source code modifications. [2] The project started as a commercial project in 2016 under the name Coati. [3] In November 2019, Sourcetrail was released as open-source software under version three of the GNU General Public License. [4]
The project was discontinued in 2021. [5]
Most of a programmer's time is invested in reading the source code.[ citation needed] Therefore, Sourcetrail is intended to help the developers to understand the source code and the relationship between different components. Sourcetrail builds a dependency graph after indexing the source code files and provides a graphical overview of the source code.
It is built in an extendable way, so it could be extended to support more programming languages.
Developer(s) | The Sourcetrail Development Team |
---|---|
Stable release | 2021.4.19
|
Repository | https://github.com/CoatiSoftware/Sourcetrail |
Operating system | Multiplatform |
Type | Software quality |
License | GNU General Public License v3.0 |
Sourcetrail was a FOSS source code explorer that provided interactive dependency graphs and support for multiple programming languages including C, C++, Java and Python. [1]
The project was started by Eberhard Gräther after an internship at Google where he worked on Google Chrome, and noticed that he consumed a lot of time (1 month) to implement a simple feature that he expected to be done in 1–2 hours. This was his motivation to develop a tool that helps in understanding the consequences of source code modifications. [2] The project started as a commercial project in 2016 under the name Coati. [3] In November 2019, Sourcetrail was released as open-source software under version three of the GNU General Public License. [4]
The project was discontinued in 2021. [5]
Most of a programmer's time is invested in reading the source code.[ citation needed] Therefore, Sourcetrail is intended to help the developers to understand the source code and the relationship between different components. Sourcetrail builds a dependency graph after indexing the source code files and provides a graphical overview of the source code.
It is built in an extendable way, so it could be extended to support more programming languages.