From the Letter to the Editor, Crosstalk: The Journal of Defense Software Engineering, October 1998: ... In an article aimed at metrics novices, it is very important to point out some of th eknown hazards of software metrics. The fact that lines of code can't be used to measure economic p roductivity is definitely a known hazard that should be stressed. In a comparative study of 10 version of the same period using 10 different programming languages (Ada 83, Ada95, C, C++, Objective C, PL/I, Assembler, CHILL, Pascal and Smalltalk), the lines of code metric failed to show either the highest productivity or best quality. Overall the lowest cost and fewest defects were found in Smalltalk and Ada95, but the lines of code metric favored assembler. Function points correctly identified Smalltalk and Ada95 as being superior, but lines of code failed to do this. Capers Jones Software Productivity Reserach OK, guys - spin it! -- Karl --