Wednesday, March 25, 2026

HOW AN LLM READS YOUR MIND EVEN WHEN YOUR FINGERS DON'T






A Deep Dive into How Large Language Models Handle Typos, Grammatical Errors, and Semantically Wrong Words

PROLOGUE: THE MIRACLE OF UNDERSTANDING BROKEN LANGUAGE

Imagine handing a page of text to a brilliant human editor. The page contains a sentence like "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree." The editor pauses, raises an eyebrow, and says: "You mean lies, right? The treasure lies beneath the old oak tree." The editor did not need to consult a dictionary. She did not run a spell-checker. She simply knew, from everything surrounding that one wrong word, what you meant to say. She used context, expectation, and a lifetime of reading to reconstruct your intent from a broken signal.

Now consider that a modern Large Language Model does something remarkably similar, and does it millions of times per second, across dozens of languages, with no eyebrow to raise. Understanding how that is possible is the subject of this article. We will travel from the very first moment your text enters the model, through the strange mathematics of meaning, all the way to the moment the model produces a response that makes it clear it understood you perfectly, despite your typo, your grammar slip, or your completely wrong word choice. Along the way we will look at concrete examples, trace the flow of information through the architecture, and develop a genuine intuition for what is happening inside the machine.

CHAPTER ONE: THE FIRST PROBLEM - YOUR TEXT IS NOT WHAT THE MODEL SEES

Before a transformer model can attend to anything, reason about anything, or generate anything, it must convert your raw text into a form it can actually process. Text is a sequence of characters. Neural networks operate on numbers. The bridge between these two worlds is called tokenization, and it is far more interesting than it sounds.

A naive approach would be to assign every word in the English language a unique number. "The" becomes 1, "cat" becomes 2, "sat" becomes 3, and so on. This breaks down almost immediately. English has hundreds of thousands of words. Proper nouns, technical terms, and neologisms appear constantly. And crucially, a misspelled word like "recieve" would simply not exist in the vocabulary at all, producing what is called an out-of-vocabulary token, a dead end that carries no information.

Modern LLMs solve this with a technique called Byte Pair Encoding, or BPE, which was originally developed for data compression and was adapted for NLP. The idea is elegant. Instead of building a vocabulary of whole words, you build a vocabulary of subword units, fragments of words that appear frequently enough to be worth representing as single tokens. The algorithm starts with individual characters and then iteratively merges the most frequently co-occurring pairs into new tokens, repeating this process until a target vocabulary size is reached. GPT-4, for instance, uses a vocabulary of roughly 100,000 such tokens. BERT and its relatives use a similar but slightly different algorithm called WordPiece.

The practical consequence for handling errors is profound. When you type a word that the tokenizer has never seen before, whether because it is a rare technical term, a proper name, or a typo, the tokenizer does not give up. It decomposes the unknown string into the subword pieces it does know, and those pieces almost always carry enough phonetic and morphological signal to let the model infer what was meant.

Let us look at a concrete example. Consider the word "recieve", a classic spelling error for "receive". A BPE tokenizer trained on a large corpus will not have "recieve" as a single token, because that misspelling is rare enough not to have earned its own entry. Instead, it will break the string into subword units something like this:

Input string:  "recieve"
Tokenized as:  ["rec", "ieve"]   (approximate, model-dependent)

Input string:  "receive"
Tokenized as:  ["rec", "eive"]   (approximate, model-dependent)

The two tokenizations are different, but they share the prefix "rec", which already anchors the word in the space of words beginning with that cluster. The surrounding sentence context then does the rest of the work, as we will see shortly. Now consider a more dramatic example, a word that is not just misspelled but entirely wrong:

Sentence A:  "The treasure lies beneath the old oak tree."
Sentence B:  "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree."

In Sentence B, "dies" is a perfectly valid English word and will tokenize without any trouble, probably as a single token. The problem is not at the tokenization level at all. The word is correctly spelled, correctly formed, and exists in the vocabulary. The error is purely semantic: "dies" does not make sense in this context, whereas "lies" does. This is a qualitatively different challenge from a typo, and it requires a qualitatively different mechanism to handle. That mechanism is the transformer's attention system, and we need to understand it in some depth before we can appreciate what happens to that wrong word.

CHAPTER TWO: EMBEDDINGS - GIVING NUMBERS A SENSE OF MEANING

Once the tokenizer has broken your text into tokens, each token is looked up in an embedding table. This table is a large matrix, learned during training, that assigns every token in the vocabulary a vector of floating-point numbers. For GPT-style models, these vectors are typically 768 to 12,288 numbers long, depending on the model size. This vector is called the token's embedding, and it is the model's initial, context-free representation of what that token means.

The geometry of this embedding space is not arbitrary. During training, the model learns to place tokens that appear in similar contexts close together in this high-dimensional space. The classic demonstration is that the vector for "king" minus the vector for "man" plus the vector for "woman" lands very close to the vector for "queen". More relevant to our topic, the vector for "lies" and the vector for "dies" are not identical, but they are not wildly far apart either. Both are short, common English verbs. Both appear in similar grammatical positions. Their initial embeddings will reflect this partial similarity.

This is important because it means that even before any contextual processing begins, a semantically wrong word like "dies" is not a total stranger to the neighborhood of the correct word "lies". The model has a starting point. What it does with that starting point, as it processes the surrounding context, is where the real magic happens.

The embedding also incorporates positional information. Because the transformer processes all tokens in parallel rather than sequentially, it needs to know where each token sits in the sentence. This is achieved by adding a positional encoding to each token's embedding, a vector that encodes the token's position in the sequence. The result is that each token enters the first transformer layer carrying two kinds of information: a rough sense of its own meaning, and a precise sense of where it sits in the sentence.

CHAPTER THREE: THE TRANSFORMER LAYER - WHERE CONTEXT IS BUILT

A transformer model is a stack of identical layers. GPT-3 has 96 of them. Each layer takes the current set of token representations as input and produces a new, richer set of representations as output. The key operation inside each layer is self-attention, and it is worth understanding in detail because it is the mechanism that allows the model to notice that "dies" does not fit.

Self-attention works by allowing every token to look at every other token in the sequence and decide how much to borrow from each one. The mechanism is implemented through three learned linear projections. For each token, the model computes three vectors from its current representation: a Query vector, a Key vector, and a Value vector. You can think of the Query as the question a token is asking about the rest of the sequence, the Key as the label each token hangs on itself to answer such questions, and the Value as the actual information each token is willing to share if it turns out to be relevant.

The attention score between any two tokens is computed as the dot product of one token's Query with the other token's Key, scaled by the square root of the vector dimension to prevent the scores from becoming too large. These raw scores are then passed through a softmax function, which converts them into a probability distribution that sums to one. The resulting numbers are the attention weights, and they determine how much of each token's Value vector flows into the updated representation of the querying token.

Let us make this concrete with a simplified illustration. Suppose we have the sentence "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree" and we are computing the attention weights for the token "dies" in some intermediate layer of the model. The attention weights might look something like this:

Token:          "The"   "treasure"  "dies"  "beneath"  "the"   "old"   "oak"   "tree"
Attention wt:   0.04    0.31        0.08    0.22       0.03    0.07    0.10    0.15

What this table is telling us is that when the model is updating its representation of "dies", it is drawing most heavily from "treasure" (0.31) and "beneath" (0.22) and "tree" (0.15). These are the words that carry the most semantic weight for resolving what "dies" means in this context. The word "treasure" in particular is a powerful signal: treasures do not die, but they do lie. The word "beneath" reinforces a spatial, locational reading of the sentence. The word "tree" adds further environmental grounding.

The model does not consciously reason through this. What happens is that the Query vector of "dies", shaped by its embedding and by all the processing in previous layers, happens to align strongly with the Key vectors of "treasure", "beneath", and "tree", because those alignments were learned to be useful during training on billions of sentences. The result is that the updated representation of "dies" after this attention operation is heavily colored by the semantics of location, concealment, and physical objects, which is exactly the semantic neighborhood of "lies" in the sense of "to be situated somewhere".

This is the first and most important sense in which the model handles the wrong word. It does not erase "dies" and replace it with "lies". It builds a contextual representation of "dies" that is pulled, by the gravitational force of the surrounding context, toward the meaning that "lies" would have had. The representation of the wrong word is warped by context until it approximates the representation the right word would have had.

CHAPTER FOUR: MULTI-HEAD ATTENTION - LOOKING FROM MANY ANGLES AT ONCE

The attention mechanism described above is powerful, but it has a limitation: a single set of Query, Key, and Value projections can only capture one type of relationship at a time. The transformer addresses this by running multiple attention operations in parallel, each with its own learned projections. These are called attention heads, and a typical large model has between 12 and 96 of them per layer.

Different attention heads tend to specialize in different kinds of relationships. Some heads become sensitive to syntactic structure, learning to connect verbs with their subjects and objects. Other heads track coreference, linking pronouns to the nouns they refer to. Still others seem to capture semantic similarity, grouping words that belong to the same conceptual domain. This specialization is not programmed in; it emerges from training.

For our sentence "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree", the multi-head attention mechanism means that "dies" is simultaneously being analyzed from multiple perspectives. One head might be asking: what is the grammatical subject of this verb? It finds "treasure" and notes that treasures are inanimate, which is inconsistent with the primary meaning of "dies" (to cease living). Another head might be asking: what preposition follows this verb, and what does that tell us about its meaning? It finds "beneath", which suggests a locational or positional reading. A third head might be tracking the overall semantic register of the sentence, noting that "old oak tree" and "treasure" together evoke a buried-treasure narrative, in which the verb "lies" is far more common than "dies".

The outputs of all these heads are concatenated and passed through a linear projection, producing a single unified representation that has been enriched by all these simultaneous perspectives. The wrong word "dies" has now been processed through a rich, multi-dimensional contextual lens, and its representation has been shaped by the consistent pressure of all the surrounding evidence pointing toward a locational, not a mortal, meaning.

Here is a schematic of how the multi-head outputs combine:

Head 1 output  (syntactic role):     [v1_1, v1_2, ..., v1_k]
Head 2 output  (semantic field):     [v2_1, v2_2, ..., v2_k]
Head 3 output  (prepositional cue):  [v3_1, v3_2, ..., v3_k]
...
Head N output  (positional context): [vN_1, vN_2, ..., vN_k]

Concatenated:  [v1_1...v1_k | v2_1...v2_k | ... | vN_1...vN_k]
Linear proj:   W_o * concatenated  =>  final representation of "dies"

The final representation is a dense vector that encodes not just the word "dies" in isolation, but "dies" as it exists in this specific sentence, surrounded by these specific words, carrying this specific contextual pressure.

CHAPTER FIVE: THE FEEDFORWARD NETWORK AND THE DEPTH OF LAYERS

After the multi-head attention step, each token's representation passes through a feedforward neural network. This network is applied independently to each token's representation and consists of two linear transformations with a non-linear activation function between them. Its role is to apply a kind of learned, non-linear transformation to the contextually enriched representation, allowing the model to extract higher-level features that the attention mechanism alone might not capture.

Think of the attention mechanism as gathering information from across the sentence and the feedforward network as processing and distilling that gathered information into a more abstract representation. If attention is the act of reading all the relevant passages in a book, the feedforward network is the act of thinking about what you have read and forming a conclusion.

Crucially, this entire process, attention followed by feedforward, is repeated across all the layers of the model. Each layer refines the representations produced by the previous one. In the early layers, the representations tend to capture low-level features: morphology, part of speech, basic syntactic structure. In the middle layers, more complex syntactic and semantic relationships emerge. In the later layers, the representations become increasingly abstract and task-relevant, encoding things like the overall meaning of the sentence, the likely intent of the speaker, and the most probable continuation of the text.

For our wrong word "dies", this means that the contextual pressure exerted by the surrounding words does not act just once. It acts at every layer, accumulating and deepening with each pass. By the time the representation of "dies" has passed through all 96 layers of a large model, it has been so thoroughly shaped by its context that it may carry very little of the original "death" semantics and a great deal of the "location" semantics appropriate to the sentence.

Residual connections, which add each layer's input directly to its output before passing to the next layer, ensure that the original token identity is never completely lost. The model always knows, at some level, that the token is "dies" and not "lies". But the contextual representation built on top of that identity can diverge substantially from the token's context-free meaning. This is the deep mechanism by which transformers handle semantic errors.

CHAPTER SIX: TYPOS - A DIFFERENT KIND OF NOISE

Semantic errors like "dies" instead of "lies" are one category of problem. Typos are another, and they operate at a different level. A typo is a corruption at the character level: a letter swapped, dropped, doubled, or transposed. The word "teh" instead of "the", "recieve" instead of "receive", "accomodate" instead of "accommodate". These errors do not produce semantically wrong words; they produce malformed strings that may or may not resemble any real word.

The tokenizer is the first line of defense here. As we discussed in Part One, BPE tokenization decomposes unknown strings into known subword units. This means that even a badly mangled word will be represented by some sequence of tokens, and those tokens will carry partial phonetic and morphological information about the intended word.

Let us trace through a more dramatic example. Suppose someone types "Whre is teh nearst cofee shp?" The tokenizer will process each word independently. "Whre" might tokenize as ["Wh", "re"] or ["W", "hre"], depending on the specific tokenizer. "Teh" might tokenize as ["T", "eh"] or even as a single token if it appears frequently enough in the training data (and it does, because it is an extremely common typo). "Nearst" might become ["near", "st"]. "Cofee" might become ["Co", "fee"] or ["C", "of", "ee"]. "Shp" might become ["Sh", "p"].

Input:      "Whre is teh nearst cofee shp?"
Approx
tokens:     ["Wh","re","is","T","eh","near","st","Co","fee","sh","p","?"]

This looks like a mess. But notice what survives: "is", "near", "fee", "sh" and the question mark. The grammatical structure is partially intact. The semantic content is partially intact. And now the attention mechanism goes to work.

The token "near" attends strongly to "sh" and "p" (which together suggest "shop") and to "Co" and "fee" (which together suggest "coffee"). The token "is" attends to "Wh" and "re", which together phonetically approximate "where". The question mark at the end signals an interrogative structure. The overall probability distribution over possible meanings is strongly concentrated on the interpretation "Where is the nearest coffee shop?", because that is by far the most coherent reading of the surviving semantic fragments.

This is not a lookup in a typo dictionary. The model has never been explicitly told that "teh" means "the" or that "cofee" means "coffee". What it has learned, from training on billions of sentences, is the statistical structure of language: which words appear near which other words, which grammatical structures are common, which semantic combinations are plausible. That learned structure is robust enough to reconstruct meaning from quite severely degraded input.

However, this robustness has limits. Research has shown that adversarial typos, errors specifically designed to maximize confusion rather than randomly introduced, can significantly degrade model performance. A study on the Mistral-7B model found that accuracy on a mathematical reasoning benchmark dropped from 43.7% to 19.2% when eight adversarial character edits were introduced per prompt. The model's robustness is real but not unlimited, and it degrades gracefully rather than catastrophically for most natural typos.

CHAPTER SEVEN: GRAMMATICAL ERRORS AND THEIR SPECIAL CHARACTER

Grammatical errors are yet a third category, distinct from both typos and semantic errors. A grammatical error leaves all the words correctly spelled and semantically plausible, but arranges them in a way that violates the rules of the language. "He go to the store every day." "She don't know nothing about it." "The results was surprising."

These sentences are perfectly intelligible to a human reader, and they are also perfectly intelligible to a well-trained LLM, for a reason that is worth dwelling on. LLMs are not trained on grammar textbooks. They are trained on raw text from the internet, from books, from social media, from news articles, from academic papers, from forum discussions. That training data contains an enormous quantity of grammatically imperfect text. Native speakers make agreement errors. Non-native speakers produce systematic patterns of errors characteristic of their first language. Informal writing ignores rules that formal writing observes.

The model has therefore seen "He go to the store" many times, in many contexts, and has learned that this construction, while non-standard, is used by humans to mean exactly the same thing as "He goes to the store". The model's internal representation of the grammatical error is not a representation of confusion or failure; it is a representation of a recognizable, meaningful utterance that happens to be non-standard.

This is both a strength and a subtle philosophical point. The LLM does not have a normative grammar module that flags errors and corrects them before processing. It has a statistical model of language use, which includes non-standard use. When it encounters a grammatical error, it processes it as a variant of the standard form, drawing on the vast evidence from training that such variants carry the same meaning as their standard counterparts.

Consider this example:

Input:   "I has been working here since five years."

The model recognizes:
- Subject: "I"
- Verb phrase: "has been working" (non-standard agreement, but recognizable)
- Location: "here"
- Duration: "since five years" (non-standard, but common pattern among
             non-native English speakers, typically meaning "for five years")

The model does not need to correct the grammar to understand the sentence. It understands it directly, because it has learned the mapping from this kind of non-standard input to its standard meaning. When generating a response, however, the model will typically produce grammatically standard output, because standard output is what its training on high-quality text has taught it to generate.

CHAPTER EIGHT: THE OUTPUT SIDE - WHAT THE MODEL DOES WITH ITS UNDERSTANDING

So far we have focused on how the model processes imperfect input. But what does it do with that processed understanding? How does the understanding of a wrong word, a typo, or a grammatical error manifest in the model's output?

The answer lies in the final step of the transformer's forward pass: the language modeling head. After the input has been processed through all the transformer layers, the final representation of each token is passed through a linear layer that maps it to a vector of logits, one for each token in the vocabulary. These logits are then converted to probabilities via a softmax function. The resulting probability distribution represents the model's belief about what token should come next in the sequence.

This is where the model's contextual understanding becomes visible. If the model has successfully inferred that "dies" in "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree" was meant to be "lies", then when it generates a continuation of this sentence, it will produce text consistent with the "lies" interpretation. It might continue with "...waiting to be discovered by the brave adventurer who solves the riddle." It will not continue with "...and is mourned by all who knew it", because the contextual representation it has built for "dies" in this sentence does not support the mortality interpretation.

Similarly, if the model is asked to summarize or paraphrase the sentence, it may actually produce the corrected version. Many LLMs, when asked to restate a sentence containing an obvious error, will produce the corrected form, not because they have a correction module, but because the corrected form is what the probability distribution over the vocabulary most strongly favors when generating a paraphrase.

Let us look at a concrete illustration of the probability distribution at work. Suppose the model is generating the next word after "The treasure ___" and it has already processed the full sentence including the wrong word "dies". The probability distribution over the vocabulary for the position after "The treasure" might look something like this:

Token:          "lies"    "rests"   "sits"    "hides"   "dies"    "waits"   other
Probability:    0.34      0.18      0.12      0.11      0.04      0.08      0.13

Notice that "dies" has a very low probability (0.04) even though it is the word that actually appeared in the input. The model has, in effect, voted against the wrong word by assigning it a low probability in the output distribution. The high probability of "lies" (0.34) reflects the model's contextual inference that this is what was meant. These numbers are illustrative rather than exact measurements from a specific model, but they reflect the qualitative behavior that has been documented in the research literature.

CHAPTER NINE: THE ROLE OF TRAINING DATA IN BUILDING ROBUSTNESS

None of the mechanisms described above would work without the training that shaped them. It is worth pausing to appreciate the scale and nature of that training, because it is the ultimate source of the model's robustness to imperfect input.

A large LLM like GPT-4 is trained on trillions of tokens of text. This text is drawn from an enormous variety of sources: web pages, books, academic articles, code repositories, social media posts, news archives, and much more. This variety is not incidental; it is essential. Because the training data includes text from non-native speakers, from informal registers, from historical periods with different spelling conventions, and from domains with specialized vocabularies, the model learns to handle an extraordinarily wide range of linguistic variation.

The training objective for most LLMs is next-token prediction: given a sequence of tokens, predict the next one. This seemingly simple objective, applied at massive scale, forces the model to develop a deep understanding of language, because accurate next-token prediction requires understanding grammar, semantics, pragmatics, world knowledge, and discourse structure all at once. A model that does not understand context cannot predict the next token well, and a model that cannot handle linguistic variation will fail on a large fraction of its training data.

This means that the model's robustness to typos and errors is not a separate feature that was bolted on; it is a natural consequence of training on real human text, which is full of imperfections. The model has seen "teh" and "the" in similar contexts thousands of times. It has seen "dies" and "lies" in similar contexts thousands of times. It has learned, from the statistics of co-occurrence, that these words are often interchangeable in certain contexts and never interchangeable in others. That learned knowledge is what allows it to handle your imperfect input so gracefully.

CHAPTER TEN: WHERE THE MAGIC ENDS - KNOWN LIMITATIONS

Having painted a picture of impressive robustness, intellectual honesty requires us to also map the boundaries of that robustness. LLMs are not infallible typo-correctors or error-handlers, and understanding where they fail is as important as understanding where they succeed.

The first and most important limitation is that the model never truly corrects the input. It builds a contextual representation that may approximate the meaning of the correct input, but the original wrong token is always present in the computation. If the wrong word is unusual enough, or if the context is ambiguous enough, the model's contextual representation may not converge on the correct interpretation. In such cases, the model may produce output that is consistent with the wrong word rather than the intended one.

The second limitation is that adversarial errors, errors specifically designed to mislead rather than randomly introduced, can be much more damaging than natural typos. Research has shown that carefully chosen single-character substitutions can cause large models to fail on tasks they would otherwise handle correctly. This is because adversarial errors are designed to exploit the specific weaknesses of the model's learned representations, pushing the wrong token into a region of embedding space that is far from the intended word and close to a misleading alternative.

The third limitation concerns reasoning chains. When a model is asked to perform multi-step reasoning, a typo or wrong word in the problem statement can corrupt the first step of the reasoning, and that corruption then propagates through all subsequent steps, amplifying the error rather than absorbing it. This is particularly problematic for mathematical and logical tasks, where a single wrong symbol can completely change the answer.

The fourth limitation is language-specific. Most LLMs are trained predominantly on English text, and their robustness to errors is greatest for English. For other languages, especially those with more complex morphology or less training data, the model's ability to handle errors degrades. Research on multilingual robustness is an active area, with algorithms like MulTypo being developed to simulate human-like errors in multiple languages for evaluation purposes.

Despite these limitations, the overall picture is one of remarkable robustness for natural, human-generated errors. The transformer architecture, combined with subword tokenization and training on diverse, imperfect text, produces a system that handles the messiness of real human language with a fluency that continues to surprise even its creators.

CHAPTER ELEVEN: A COMPLETE WORKED EXAMPLE FROM INPUT TO OUTPUT

Let us now walk through the complete journey of a sentence containing multiple types of errors, tracing each step from raw input to model output.

Input: "The anshent treassure dies beneeth the old oak tree,
        and has lay their for centurys."

This sentence contains a typo ("anshent" for "ancient"), another typo ("treassure" for "treasure"), a semantic error ("dies" for "lies"), another typo ("beneeth" for "beneath"), a grammatical error ("has lay" for "has lain"), and a homophone error ("their" for "there"), plus a spelling error ("centurys" for "centuries"). It is, in short, a disaster. Let us see what happens to it.

Step 1 - Tokenization. The BPE tokenizer encounters each word in turn. "Anshent" is not in the vocabulary and is decomposed into subword units, perhaps ["an", "sh", "ent"] or ["ans", "hent"], depending on the specific tokenizer. The subword "an" is extremely common and carries a strong signal of the article or prefix. "Sh" and "ent" together phonetically approximate the ending of "ancient". "Treassure" might decompose into ["Tre", "ass", "ure"] or ["Treas", "sure"], with "sure" being a common suffix and "Treas" being close to "Treas-" as in "Treasury". "Dies", "beneeth", "old", "oak", "tree" are handled similarly, with "beneeth" decomposing into something like ["ben", "eeth"] where "ben" is a known prefix and "eeth" approximates the ending of "beneath". "Has" and "lay" are both valid tokens. "Their" is a valid token. "Centurys" might decompose into ["Century", "s"] or ["Centur", "ys"].

Step 2 - Initial embeddings. Each token receives its initial embedding vector from the embedding table. These vectors encode the context-free meaning of each subword unit. The embedding for "Treas" is close to embeddings for "Treasury", "treasure", "treasured". The embedding for "dies" is close to embeddings for "lives", "exists", "perishes", "lies".

Step 3 - Layer 1 attention. In the first transformer layer, every token attends to every other token. The fragmented tokens from "anshent" begin to cohere because they attend strongly to "old", "oak", "tree", and "treasure", all of which are semantically associated with antiquity. The token "dies" attends strongly to "Treas" and "ure" (which together suggest "treasure"), to "ben" and "eeth" (which together suggest "beneath"), and to "old", "oak", "tree". The attention weights for "dies" are pulled toward the locational, spatial semantic field.

Step 4 - Layers 2 through N. With each successive layer, the representations become richer and more contextually grounded. The fragmented tokens from "anshent" gradually accumulate a representation close to "ancient". The "has lay" construction is recognized as a non-standard form of "has lain". The "their" token, in a context where no person or group has been mentioned, is recognized as likely being the locational "there". By the final layer, the representation of every token in the sentence has been thoroughly shaped by the context of all the other tokens.

Step 5 - Output generation. When the model generates a response, it draws on these contextually shaped representations. If asked to paraphrase the sentence, it might produce: "The ancient treasure lies beneath the old oak tree and has lain there for centuries." Every error has been implicitly corrected, not by a correction module, but by the contextual pressure of the surrounding words acting through the attention mechanism across all layers of the model.

This is the complete picture. The model never explicitly identifies the errors. It never runs a spell-checker. It never consults a grammar book. It simply builds a rich contextual representation of the input, and that representation, shaped by billions of training examples of correct and fluent language, naturally gravitates toward the most coherent and plausible interpretation of what you meant to say.

EPILOGUE: THE DEEPER LESSON

There is something philosophically striking about what we have described. The transformer architecture was not designed with error correction in mind. It was designed to predict the next token in a sequence. But the demands of that task, applied at sufficient scale and on sufficiently diverse data, forced the model to develop a deep, robust, multi-level understanding of language that incidentally makes it extraordinarily good at handling imperfect input.

This is a pattern that appears repeatedly in the history of deep learning: simple objectives, applied at scale, produce capabilities that were not explicitly engineered. The LLM does not understand that "dies" is wrong in "The treasure dies beneath the old oak tree." It understands, in a deep statistical sense, that the word "lies" fits this context far better, and it acts accordingly. The distinction between understanding and statistical pattern matching, at this level of sophistication, begins to blur in ways that are both fascinating and philosophically unresolved.

What is clear is the practical result: you can type sloppily, make grammatical mistakes, and even use the wrong word entirely, and a well-trained LLM will, most of the time, understand exactly what you meant. The machine has learned to read between the lines, or more precisely, to read through the errors, because the errors are embedded in a context that is almost always rich enough to reveal the truth beneath them. Just like the treasure.

REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING

The mechanisms described in this article are grounded in the following well-established bodies of research and publicly documented model architectures. The original transformer architecture was introduced by Vaswani et al. in "Attention Is All You Need" (2017), which remains the foundational reference for everything discussed in Parts Three through Five. Byte Pair Encoding for NLP was introduced by Sennrich et al. in "Neural Machine Translation of Rare Words with Subword Units" (2016). The robustness limitations of LLMs to adversarial typos are documented in recent empirical work including research on the Adversarial Typo Attack (ATA) algorithm, which demonstrated accuracy drops from 43.7% to 19.2% on the GSM8K benchmark for Mistral-7B under adversarial character-level perturbations. The multilingual robustness evaluation framework MulTypo represents current frontier research in this area. WordPiece tokenization, used in BERT and its derivatives, was described in Schuster and Nakajima (2012) and applied to BERT by Devlin et al. in "BERT: Pre-training of Deep Bidirectional Transformers for Language Understanding" (2018). The contextualized embedding paradigm that underlies all modern LLMs was established by Peters et al. with ELMo (2018) and brought to full maturity by the BERT and GPT families of models.

LLM-Based Multi-Language Code and Design Analyzer: An Architecture and Implementation Guide



Introduction and Problem Statement


Modern software development environments increasingly require sophisticated code analysis tools that can understand and process multiple programming languages simultaneously. Traditional static analysis tools often operate in isolation, focusing on single languages or specific aspects of code quality. However, contemporary software systems are polyglot in nature, incorporating multiple programming languages, frameworks, and architectural patterns within the same codebase.


The challenge lies in creating a unified analysis system that can leverage the power of Large Language Models while maintaining efficiency, accuracy, and scalability across diverse programming languages including Python, C, C++, Java, C#, Rust, Go, JavaScript, and TypeScript. This system must not only understand syntax and semantics but also capture complex relationships between code artifacts, design patterns, and architectural decisions.


The core problems we address include efficient code representation and chunking strategies, relationship modeling between code entities, context-aware analysis using Retrieval-Augmented Generation, LLM-based reasoning and insight generation, and optimization techniques for large-scale codebases. Each of these problems requires careful consideration of trade-offs between accuracy, performance, and resource utilization.


System Architecture Overview


The proposed LLM-based code analyzer follows a modular architecture designed around six core subsystems. The Language Processing Pipeline handles multi-language parsing and normalization. The Intelligent Chunking Engine implements syntactic and semantic segmentation strategies. The GraphRAG Knowledge Store maintains relationships between code entities. The LLM Analysis Engine performs reasoning and insight generation using Large Language Models. The Context-Aware Analysis Engine manages context optimization and memory usage. Finally, the Query and Retrieval Interface provides user-facing functionality.


This architecture emphasizes separation of concerns while enabling tight integration between components. The system operates on the principle of progressive refinement, where initial syntactic analysis informs semantic understanding, which in turn enables relationship extraction and contextual reasoning. The LLM serves as the central reasoning engine that transforms structured code representations into meaningful insights and actionable recommendations.


Problem 1: Multi-Language Parsing and Normalization


Problem Description


Different programming languages exhibit varying syntactic structures, semantic models, and paradigmatic approaches. Creating a unified representation that preserves language-specific nuances while enabling cross-language analysis presents significant challenges. The system must handle languages with different compilation models, type systems, and execution environments.


Solution Architecture


The Language Processing Pipeline employs a plugin-based architecture where each supported language implements a common interface. This design allows for language-specific optimizations while maintaining system coherence.



from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
from typing import Dict, List, Any, Optional
from dataclasses import dataclass
from enum import Enum
class LanguageType(Enum):
    PYTHON = "python"
    C = "c"
    CPP = "cpp"
    JAVA = "java"
    CSHARP = "csharp"
    RUST = "rust"
    GO = "go"
    JAVASCRIPT = "javascript"
    TYPESCRIPT = "typescript"
@dataclass
class CodeEntity:
    """Represents a normalized code entity across all languages."""
    entity_type: str
    name: str
    signature: Optional[str]
    body: str
    start_line: int
    end_line: int
    language: LanguageType
    metadata: Dict[str, Any]
    dependencies: List[str]
    complexity_metrics: Dict[str, float]
class LanguageProcessor(ABC):
    """Abstract base class for language-specific processors."""
    
    @abstractmethod
    def parse_file(self, file_path: str, content: str) -> List[CodeEntity]:
        """Parse a source file and extract code entities."""
        pass
    
    @abstractmethod
    def extract_dependencies(self, entity: CodeEntity) -> List[str]:
        """Extract dependencies for a given code entity."""
        pass
    
    @abstractmethod
    def calculate_complexity(self, entity: CodeEntity) -> Dict[str, float]:
        """Calculate complexity metrics for the entity."""
        pass
    
    @abstractmethod
    def normalize_syntax(self, code: str) -> str:
        """Normalize language-specific syntax for cross-language analysis."""
        pass



The normalization process addresses several key challenges. First, it standardizes naming conventions across languages, converting between different case styles and identifier patterns. Second, it creates unified representations for common programming constructs such as functions, classes, and modules. Third, it extracts and normalizes type information where available, creating consistent type signatures even for dynamically typed languages.


Implementation Strategy


Each language processor implements sophisticated parsing logic tailored to the specific language characteristics. For example, the Python processor handles dynamic typing and runtime binding, while the C++ processor manages template instantiation and namespace resolution.



class PythonProcessor(LanguageProcessor):

    """Python-specific code processor with AST analysis."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.ast_parser = ast

        self.complexity_calculator = PythonComplexityCalculator()

    

    def parse_file(self, file_path: str, content: str) -> List[CodeEntity]:

        """Parse Python file using AST analysis."""

        try:

            tree = self.ast_parser.parse(content)

            entities = []

            

            for node in ast.walk(tree):

                if isinstance(node, ast.FunctionDef):

                    entity = self._extract_function_entity(node, file_path)

                    entities.append(entity)

                elif isinstance(node, ast.ClassDef):

                    entity = self._extract_class_entity(node, file_path)

                    entities.append(entity)

                elif isinstance(node, ast.Import) or isinstance(node, ast.ImportFrom):

                    entity = self._extract_import_entity(node, file_path)

                    entities.append(entity)

            

            return entities

        except SyntaxError as e:

            raise ParseError(f"Python syntax error in {file_path}: {e}")

    

    def _extract_function_entity(self, node: ast.FunctionDef, file_path: str) -> CodeEntity:

        """Extract function entity with comprehensive metadata."""

        signature = self._build_function_signature(node)

        body = ast.unparse(node) if hasattr(ast, 'unparse') else ast.dump(node)

        

        dependencies = self._extract_function_dependencies(node)

        complexity = self.complexity_calculator.calculate_function_complexity(node)

        

        metadata = {

            'decorators': [ast.unparse(dec) for dec in node.decorator_list],

            'arguments': [arg.arg for arg in node.args.args],

            'return_annotation': ast.unparse(node.returns) if node.returns else None,

            'docstring': ast.get_docstring(node),

            'file_path': file_path

        }

        

        return CodeEntity(

            entity_type='function',

            name=node.name,

            signature=signature,

            body=body,

            start_line=node.lineno,

            end_line=node.end_lineno or node.lineno,

            language=LanguageType.PYTHON,

            metadata=metadata,

            dependencies=dependencies,

            complexity_metrics=complexity

        )



The rationale for this approach centers on maintaining language fidelity while enabling cross-language analysis. By preserving language-specific metadata while creating normalized representations, the system can perform both deep language-specific analysis and broad architectural assessment.


Problem 2: Intelligent Syntactic and Semantic Chunking


Problem Description


Effective code analysis requires intelligent segmentation of source code into meaningful chunks that preserve semantic coherence while fitting within LLM context windows. Traditional line-based or character-based chunking often breaks logical units, leading to degraded analysis quality. The system must balance chunk size optimization with semantic preservation across different programming paradigms.


Solution Architecture


The Intelligent Chunking Engine implements a multi-layered approach combining syntactic analysis, semantic understanding, and context optimization. The system employs three primary chunking strategies that operate in coordination.



from typing import List, Tuple, Set

from dataclasses import dataclass

import networkx as nx


@dataclass

class CodeChunk:

    """Represents a semantically coherent code chunk."""

    chunk_id: str

    content: str

    entities: List[CodeEntity]

    chunk_type: str

    semantic_hash: str

    dependencies: Set[str]

    size_metrics: Dict[str, int]

    context_priority: float


class ChunkingStrategy(ABC):

    """Abstract base class for chunking strategies."""

    

    @abstractmethod

    def create_chunks(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Create chunks from code entities."""

        pass

    

    @abstractmethod

    def optimize_chunk_size(self, chunks: List[CodeChunk], max_tokens: int) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Optimize chunk sizes for LLM processing."""

        pass


class SemanticChunkingEngine:

    """Advanced chunking engine with semantic awareness."""

    

    def __init__(self, max_chunk_tokens: int = 4000):

        self.max_chunk_tokens = max_chunk_tokens

        self.syntactic_chunker = SyntacticChunker()

        self.semantic_chunker = SemanticChunker()

        self.dependency_analyzer = DependencyAnalyzer()

        self.token_estimator = TokenEstimator()

    

    def create_optimized_chunks(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Create optimized chunks using multi-strategy approach."""

        # Phase 1: Syntactic chunking based on language constructs

        syntactic_chunks = self.syntactic_chunker.create_chunks(entities)

        

        # Phase 2: Semantic refinement based on logical cohesion

        semantic_chunks = self.semantic_chunker.refine_chunks(syntactic_chunks)

        

        # Phase 3: Dependency-aware optimization

        dependency_graph = self.dependency_analyzer.build_dependency_graph(entities)

        optimized_chunks = self._optimize_for_dependencies(semantic_chunks, dependency_graph)

        

        # Phase 4: Token-based size optimization

        final_chunks = self._optimize_token_usage(optimized_chunks)

        

        return final_chunks

    

    def _optimize_for_dependencies(self, chunks: List[CodeChunk], 

                                 dependency_graph: nx.DiGraph) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Optimize chunks based on dependency relationships."""

        optimized_chunks = []

        processed_entities = set()

        

        # Group strongly connected components together

        for component in nx.strongly_connected_components(dependency_graph):

            if len(component) == 1:

                continue

            

            component_entities = [entity for entity in chunks 

                                if entity.chunk_id in component and 

                                entity.chunk_id not in processed_entities]

            

            if component_entities:

                merged_chunk = self._merge_related_chunks(component_entities)

                optimized_chunks.append(merged_chunk)

                processed_entities.update(entity.chunk_id for entity in component_entities)

        

        # Add remaining individual chunks

        for chunk in chunks:

            if chunk.chunk_id not in processed_entities:

                optimized_chunks.append(chunk)

        

        return optimized_chunks



Syntactic Chunking Strategy


Syntactic chunking operates at the language construct level, identifying natural boundaries such as function definitions, class declarations, and module boundaries. This approach ensures that logical programming units remain intact during analysis.



class SyntacticChunker(ChunkingStrategy):

    """Chunker based on syntactic language constructs."""

    

    def create_chunks(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Create chunks based on syntactic boundaries."""

        chunks = []

        current_chunk_entities = []

        current_size = 0

        

        # Sort entities by file and line number for coherent chunking

        sorted_entities = sorted(entities, key=lambda e: (e.metadata.get('file_path', ''), e.start_line))

        

        for entity in sorted_entities:

            entity_size = self._estimate_entity_size(entity)

            

            # Check if adding this entity would exceed size limits

            if current_size + entity_size > self.max_chunk_tokens and current_chunk_entities:

                chunk = self._create_chunk_from_entities(current_chunk_entities, 'syntactic')

                chunks.append(chunk)

                current_chunk_entities = [entity]

                current_size = entity_size

            else:

                current_chunk_entities.append(entity)

                current_size += entity_size

        

        # Create final chunk if entities remain

        if current_chunk_entities:

            chunk = self._create_chunk_from_entities(current_chunk_entities, 'syntactic')

            chunks.append(chunk)

        

        return chunks

    

    def _estimate_entity_size(self, entity: CodeEntity) -> int:

        """Estimate token count for a code entity."""

        # Rough estimation: 4 characters per token on average

        content_tokens = len(entity.body) // 4

        metadata_tokens = sum(len(str(v)) for v in entity.metadata.values()) // 4

        return content_tokens + metadata_tokens + 50  # Buffer for structure



Semantic Chunking Strategy


Semantic chunking builds upon syntactic analysis by considering logical relationships between code entities. This strategy groups related functions, classes, and modules that work together to implement specific functionality.



class SemanticChunker:

    """Advanced semantic chunking with relationship analysis."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.similarity_calculator = CodeSimilarityCalculator()

        self.cohesion_analyzer = CohesionAnalyzer()

    

    def refine_chunks(self, syntactic_chunks: List[CodeChunk]) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Refine syntactic chunks using semantic analysis."""

        refined_chunks = []

        

        for chunk in syntactic_chunks:

            if self._should_split_chunk(chunk):

                sub_chunks = self._split_semantically(chunk)

                refined_chunks.extend(sub_chunks)

            elif self._can_merge_with_neighbors(chunk, refined_chunks):

                last_chunk = refined_chunks.pop()

                merged_chunk = self._merge_chunks(last_chunk, chunk)

                refined_chunks.append(merged_chunk)

            else:

                refined_chunks.append(chunk)

        

        return refined_chunks

    

    def _should_split_chunk(self, chunk: CodeChunk) -> bool:

        """Determine if a chunk should be split based on semantic analysis."""

        if len(chunk.entities) < 3:

            return False

        

        # Calculate semantic cohesion within the chunk

        cohesion_score = self.cohesion_analyzer.calculate_cohesion(chunk.entities)

        

        # Split if cohesion is low and chunk is large

        return cohesion_score < 0.3 and chunk.size_metrics['tokens'] > 2000

    

    def _split_semantically(self, chunk: CodeChunk) -> List[CodeChunk]:

        """Split a chunk based on semantic boundaries."""

        entity_groups = self._cluster_entities_by_semantics(chunk.entities)

        

        sub_chunks = []

        for group in entity_groups:

            if group:  # Ensure group is not empty

                sub_chunk = self._create_chunk_from_entities(group, 'semantic')

                sub_chunks.append(sub_chunk)

        

        return sub_chunks



The semantic chunking strategy employs clustering algorithms to group related entities based on shared functionality, naming patterns, and interaction frequency. This approach significantly improves the quality of LLM analysis by ensuring that related code elements are processed together.


Problem 3: GraphRAG Implementation for Code Relationships


Problem Description


Understanding code requires modeling complex relationships between entities across files, modules, and even programming languages. Traditional vector-based RAG systems lose important structural information about how code components interact. The system needs to capture and leverage these relationships for more accurate analysis and reasoning.


Solution Architecture


The GraphRAG Knowledge Store implements a sophisticated graph-based approach to storing and retrieving code relationships. The system models entities as nodes and relationships as edges, enabling complex queries that consider both semantic similarity and structural connectivity.



import networkx as nx

from typing import Dict, List, Set, Tuple, Optional

from dataclasses import dataclass, field

from enum import Enum


class RelationshipType(Enum):

    CALLS = "calls"

    INHERITS = "inherits"

    IMPLEMENTS = "implements"

    IMPORTS = "imports"

    DEPENDS_ON = "depends_on"

    CONTAINS = "contains"

    OVERRIDES = "overrides"

    INSTANTIATES = "instantiates"

    REFERENCES = "references"


@dataclass

class CodeRelationship:

    """Represents a relationship between code entities."""

    source_entity_id: str

    target_entity_id: str

    relationship_type: RelationshipType

    strength: float

    context: Dict[str, Any]

    metadata: Dict[str, Any] = field(default_factory=dict)


class GraphRAGStore:

    """Graph-based RAG store for code relationships."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.entity_graph = nx.MultiDiGraph()

        self.entity_embeddings = {}

        self.relationship_weights = {}

        self.semantic_clusters = {}

        self.embedding_model = CodeEmbeddingModel()

    

    def add_entity(self, entity: CodeEntity) -> None:

        """Add a code entity to the graph store."""

        entity_id = self._generate_entity_id(entity)

        

        # Add node with comprehensive attributes

        self.entity_graph.add_node(

            entity_id,

            entity_type=entity.entity_type,

            name=entity.name,

            language=entity.language.value,

            file_path=entity.metadata.get('file_path', ''),

            complexity=entity.complexity_metrics,

            metadata=entity.metadata

        )

        

        # Generate and store embeddings

        embedding = self.embedding_model.encode_entity(entity)

        self.entity_embeddings[entity_id] = embedding

        

        # Update semantic clusters

        self._update_semantic_clusters(entity_id, embedding)

    

    def add_relationship(self, relationship: CodeRelationship) -> None:

        """Add a relationship between code entities."""

        self.entity_graph.add_edge(

            relationship.source_entity_id,

            relationship.target_entity_id,

            relationship_type=relationship.relationship_type.value,

            strength=relationship.strength,

            context=relationship.context,

            metadata=relationship.metadata

        )

        

        # Update relationship weights for graph algorithms

        edge_key = (relationship.source_entity_id, relationship.target_entity_id)

        self.relationship_weights[edge_key] = relationship.strength

    

    def find_related_entities(self, entity_id: str, max_depth: int = 3, 

                            relationship_types: Optional[List[RelationshipType]] = None) -> List[str]:

        """Find entities related to the given entity within specified depth."""

        if entity_id not in self.entity_graph:

            return []

        

        related_entities = set()

        queue = [(entity_id, 0)]

        visited = {entity_id}

        

        while queue:

            current_entity, depth = queue.pop(0)

            

            if depth >= max_depth:

                continue

            

            # Explore outgoing relationships

            for neighbor in self.entity_graph.successors(current_entity):

                edge_data = self.entity_graph.get_edge_data(current_entity, neighbor)

                

                # Filter by relationship types if specified

                if relationship_types:

                    edge_types = [RelationshipType(data.get('relationship_type', '')) 

                                for data in edge_data.values()]

                    if not any(rt in relationship_types for rt in edge_types):

                        continue

                

                if neighbor not in visited:

                    visited.add(neighbor)

                    related_entities.add(neighbor)

                    queue.append((neighbor, depth + 1))

            

            # Explore incoming relationships

            for predecessor in self.entity_graph.predecessors(current_entity):

                edge_data = self.entity_graph.get_edge_data(predecessor, current_entity)

                

                if relationship_types:

                    edge_types = [RelationshipType(data.get('relationship_type', '')) 

                                for data in edge_data.values()]

                    if not any(rt in relationship_types for rt in edge_types):

                        continue

                

                if predecessor not in visited:

                    visited.add(predecessor)

                    related_entities.add(predecessor)

                    queue.append((predecessor, depth + 1))

        

        return list(related_entities)



Relationship Extraction and Analysis


The system implements sophisticated relationship extraction that goes beyond simple syntactic analysis to understand semantic connections between code entities.



class RelationshipExtractor:

    """Extracts relationships between code entities."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.call_graph_analyzer = CallGraphAnalyzer()

        self.inheritance_analyzer = InheritanceAnalyzer()

        self.dependency_analyzer = DependencyAnalyzer()

        self.semantic_analyzer = SemanticRelationshipAnalyzer()

    

    def extract_relationships(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeRelationship]:

        """Extract all types of relationships between entities."""

        relationships = []

        

        # Extract syntactic relationships

        relationships.extend(self._extract_call_relationships(entities))

        relationships.extend(self._extract_inheritance_relationships(entities))

        relationships.extend(self._extract_dependency_relationships(entities))

        

        # Extract semantic relationships

        relationships.extend(self._extract_semantic_relationships(entities))

        

        # Calculate relationship strengths

        self._calculate_relationship_strengths(relationships, entities)

        

        return relationships

    

    def _extract_call_relationships(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeRelationship]:

        """Extract function/method call relationships."""

        call_relationships = []

        entity_lookup = {entity.name: entity for entity in entities}

        

        for entity in entities:

            if entity.entity_type in ['function', 'method']:

                called_functions = self.call_graph_analyzer.extract_function_calls(entity)

                

                for called_function in called_functions:

                    if called_function in entity_lookup:

                        target_entity = entity_lookup[called_function]

                        

                        relationship = CodeRelationship(

                            source_entity_id=self._generate_entity_id(entity),

                            target_entity_id=self._generate_entity_id(target_entity),

                            relationship_type=RelationshipType.CALLS,

                            strength=1.0,  # Will be refined later

                            context={

                                'call_frequency': self._count_call_frequency(entity, called_function),

                                'call_context': self._extract_call_context(entity, called_function)

                            }

                        )

                        call_relationships.append(relationship)

        

        return call_relationships

    

    def _extract_semantic_relationships(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeRelationship]:

        """Extract semantic relationships based on naming and functionality."""

        semantic_relationships = []

        

        for i, entity1 in enumerate(entities):

            for entity2 in entities[i+1:]:

                similarity_score = self.semantic_analyzer.calculate_semantic_similarity(entity1, entity2)

                

                if similarity_score > 0.7:  # High semantic similarity threshold

                    relationship = CodeRelationship(

                        source_entity_id=self._generate_entity_id(entity1),

                        target_entity_id=self._generate_entity_id(entity2),

                        relationship_type=RelationshipType.REFERENCES,

                        strength=similarity_score,

                        context={

                            'similarity_type': 'semantic',

                            'similarity_score': similarity_score,

                            'common_concepts': self.semantic_analyzer.extract_common_concepts(entity1, entity2)

                        }

                    )

                    semantic_relationships.append(relationship)

        

        return semantic_relationships



Graph-Based Retrieval and Reasoning


The GraphRAG system enables sophisticated retrieval that considers both semantic similarity and structural relationships. This approach provides more contextually relevant information for LLM analysis.



class GraphRAGRetriever:

    """Retrieves relevant code context using graph-based reasoning."""

    

    def __init__(self, graph_store: GraphRAGStore):

        self.graph_store = graph_store

        self.ranking_algorithm = GraphRankingAlgorithm()

        self.context_optimizer = ContextOptimizer()

    

    def retrieve_context(self, query: str, max_entities: int = 20, 

                        context_strategy: str = 'hybrid') -> List[CodeEntity]:

        """Retrieve relevant code entities for a given query."""

        # Phase 1: Semantic similarity search

        semantic_candidates = self._semantic_search(query, max_entities * 2)

        

        # Phase 2: Graph-based expansion

        if context_strategy in ['graph', 'hybrid']:

            graph_candidates = self._expand_with_graph_context(semantic_candidates)

        else:

            graph_candidates = semantic_candidates

        

        # Phase 3: Ranking and selection

        ranked_entities = self.ranking_algorithm.rank_entities(

            graph_candidates, query, self.graph_store.entity_graph

        )

        

        # Phase 4: Context optimization

        optimized_context = self.context_optimizer.optimize_context(

            ranked_entities[:max_entities], query

        )

        

        return optimized_context

    

    def _semantic_search(self, query: str, max_results: int) -> List[str]:

        """Perform semantic similarity search."""

        query_embedding = self.graph_store.embedding_model.encode_query(query)

        

        similarities = []

        for entity_id, entity_embedding in self.graph_store.entity_embeddings.items():

            similarity = self._calculate_cosine_similarity(query_embedding, entity_embedding)

            similarities.append((entity_id, similarity))

        

        # Sort by similarity and return top results

        similarities.sort(key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)

        return [entity_id for entity_id, _ in similarities[:max_results]]

    

    def _expand_with_graph_context(self, seed_entities: List[str]) -> List[str]:

        """Expand seed entities using graph relationships."""

        expanded_entities = set(seed_entities)

        

        for entity_id in seed_entities:

            # Find strongly connected entities

            related_entities = self.graph_store.find_related_entities(

                entity_id, max_depth=2, 

                relationship_types=[RelationshipType.CALLS, RelationshipType.DEPENDS_ON]

            )

            

            # Add high-strength relationships

            for related_id in related_entities:

                edge_data = self.graph_store.entity_graph.get_edge_data(entity_id, related_id)

                if edge_data and any(data.get('strength', 0) > 0.5 for data in edge_data.values()):

                    expanded_entities.add(related_id)

        

        return list(expanded_entities)



The GraphRAG implementation provides significant advantages over traditional vector-based approaches by preserving and leveraging the structural relationships inherent in code. This enables more accurate context retrieval and supports complex reasoning about code architecture and design patterns.


Problem 4: LLM-Based Analysis and Reasoning Engine


Problem Description


The core challenge lies in effectively utilizing Large Language Models to perform sophisticated code analysis that goes beyond simple pattern matching. The system must transform structured code representations into meaningful insights, recommendations, and architectural assessments. This requires careful prompt engineering, response parsing, and integration with the GraphRAG context to ensure accurate and actionable analysis results.


Solution Architecture


The LLM Analysis Engine serves as the central reasoning component that processes code chunks with enriched context to generate comprehensive analysis results. The engine implements specialized prompt templates for different analysis types and sophisticated response parsing to extract structured insights.



import asyncio
import json
from typing import Dict, List, Any, Optional
from dataclasses import dataclass
from enum import Enum
class AnalysisType(Enum):
    CODE_QUALITY = "code_quality"
    ARCHITECTURE = "architecture_analysis"
    SECURITY = "security_analysis"
    PERFORMANCE = "performance_analysis"
    MAINTAINABILITY = "maintainability_analysis"
    GENERAL = "general"
@dataclass
class AnalysisContext:
    """Represents analysis context with memory optimization."""
    primary_entities: List[CodeEntity]
    supporting_entities: List[CodeEntity]
    relationship_graph: nx.Graph
    analysis_history: List[Dict[str, Any]]
    context_hash: str
    priority_scores: Dict[str, float]
    token_budget: int
    optimization_metadata: Dict[str, Any]
class LLMAnalysisEngine:
    """Core LLM-based analysis engine with comprehensive reasoning capabilities."""
    
    def __init__(self, model_name: str = "gpt-4"):
        self.llm_client = self._initialize_llm_client(model_name)
        self.prompt_templates = PromptTemplateManager()
        self.response_parser = ResponseParser()
        self.analysis_cache = AnalysisCache()
        self.quality_assessor = AnalysisQualityAssessor()
    
    async def analyze_with_context(self, context: AnalysisContext, 
                                 config: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:
        """Perform comprehensive LLM-based analysis with optimized context."""
        analysis_type = AnalysisType(config.get('analysis_type', 'general'))
        
        # Check cache for existing analysis
        cache_key = self._generate_cache_key(context, analysis_type)
        cached_result = await self.analysis_cache.get_cached_analysis(cache_key)
        if cached_result:
            return cached_result
        
        # Build specialized analysis prompt
        prompt = self.prompt_templates.build_analysis_prompt(
            context, analysis_type, config
        )
        
        # Execute LLM analysis with error handling and retries
        llm_response = await self._execute_llm_analysis(
            prompt, config, max_retries=3
        )
        
        # Parse and structure response
        structured_result = self.response_parser.parse_analysis_response(
            llm_response, analysis_type
        )
        
        # Assess analysis quality
        quality_score = self.quality_assessor.assess_analysis_quality(
            structured_result, context, analysis_type
        )
        structured_result['quality_metadata'] = {
            'quality_score': quality_score,
            'analysis_timestamp': time.time(),
            'model_used': self.llm_client.model_name,
            'context_size': len(context.primary_entities) + len(context.supporting_entities)
        }
        
        # Cache result for future use
        await self.analysis_cache.cache_analysis(cache_key, structured_result)
        
        return structured_result
    
    async def analyze_code_chunk(self, chunk: CodeChunk, 
                               analysis_queries: List[str]) -> Dict[str, Any]:
        """Analyze a specific code chunk with multiple targeted queries."""
        results = {}
        
        for query in analysis_queries:
            # Build query-specific prompt
            prompt = self.prompt_templates.build_chunk_analysis_prompt(chunk, query)
            
            # Execute analysis
            response = await self.llm_client.generate_response(
                prompt,
                max_tokens=1500,
                temperature=0.1
            )
            
            # Parse response
            parsed_response = self.response_parser.parse_chunk_response(response, query)
            results[query] = parsed_response
        
        return results
    
    async def _execute_llm_analysis(self, prompt: str, config: Dict[str, Any], 
                                  max_retries: int = 3) -> str:
        """Execute LLM analysis with error handling and retries."""
        for attempt in range(max_retries):
            try:
                response = await self.llm_client.generate_response(
                    prompt,
                    max_tokens=config.get('max_response_tokens', 2000),
                    temperature=config.get('temperature', 0.1),
                    top_p=config.get('top_p', 0.9)
                )
                
                # Validate response quality
                if self._validate_response_quality(response):
                    return response
                else:
                    print(f"Response quality validation failed, attempt {attempt + 1}")
                    
            except Exception as e:
                print(f"LLM analysis attempt {attempt + 1} failed: {str(e)}")
                if attempt == max_retries - 1:
                    raise
                await asyncio.sleep(2 ** attempt)  # Exponential backoff
        
        raise RuntimeError("LLM analysis failed after all retry attempts")
    
    def _validate_response_quality(self, response: str) -> bool:
        """Validate the quality and completeness of LLM response."""
        if len(response.strip()) < 100:
            return False
        
        # Check for common error patterns
        error_indicators = [
            "I cannot", "I'm unable", "I don't have access",
            "Error:", "Exception:", "Failed to"
        ]
        
        response_lower = response.lower()
        if any(indicator.lower() in response_lower for indicator in error_indicators):
            return False
        
        return True


Prompt Template Management


The prompt template system ensures consistent and effective communication with the LLM across different analysis types. Each template is carefully crafted to elicit specific types of insights while maintaining clarity and focus.



class PromptTemplateManager:

    """Manages specialized LLM prompts for different analysis types."""

    

    def build_analysis_prompt(self, context: AnalysisContext, 

                            analysis_type: AnalysisType, 

                            config: Dict[str, Any]) -> str:

        """Build comprehensive analysis prompt based on type and context."""

        

        if analysis_type == AnalysisType.CODE_QUALITY:

            return self._build_code_quality_prompt(context, config)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.ARCHITECTURE:

            return self._build_architecture_prompt(context, config)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.SECURITY:

            return self._build_security_prompt(context, config)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.PERFORMANCE:

            return self._build_performance_prompt(context, config)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.MAINTAINABILITY:

            return self._build_maintainability_prompt(context, config)

        else:

            return self._build_general_prompt(context, config)

    

    def _build_code_quality_prompt(self, context: AnalysisContext, 

                                 config: Dict[str, Any]) -> str:

        """Build comprehensive code quality analysis prompt."""

        primary_code = self._format_entities_for_prompt(context.primary_entities)

        supporting_code = self._format_entities_for_prompt(context.supporting_entities)

        relationships = self._format_relationships_for_prompt(context.relationship_graph)

        

        prompt = f"""You are an expert software engineer and code quality analyst. Analyze the following code for quality issues, best practices adherence, and improvement opportunities.


PRIMARY CODE TO ANALYZE:

{primary_code}


SUPPORTING CONTEXT:

{supporting_code}


RELATIONSHIPS AND DEPENDENCIES:

{relationships}


ANALYSIS REQUIREMENTS:


1. Code Quality Assessment:

   - Identify code smells and anti-patterns with specific examples

   - Evaluate adherence to clean code principles (SRP, DRY, KISS, etc.)

   - Assess naming conventions and code readability

   - Check for proper error handling and edge case management

   - Evaluate documentation quality and completeness


2. Design Pattern Analysis:

   - Identify design patterns currently in use

   - Suggest appropriate patterns where missing or misapplied

   - Evaluate pattern implementation quality and correctness

   - Assess pattern consistency across the codebase


3. Best Practices Compliance:

   - Language-specific best practices adherence

   - Framework and library usage patterns

   - Testing approach and coverage considerations

   - Performance implications of current implementation


4. Maintainability Assessment:

   - Evaluate code complexity and cognitive load

   - Assess modularity, coupling, and cohesion

   - Identify code duplication and refactoring opportunities

   - Evaluate testability and debugging ease


5. Specific Recommendations:

   - Provide concrete, actionable improvement suggestions

   - Prioritize recommendations by impact and effort required

   - Include code examples demonstrating improvements

   - Suggest refactoring strategies where appropriate


Please provide a structured analysis with:

- Overall quality score (1-10)

- Critical issues requiring immediate attention

- Medium priority improvements

- Long-term enhancement suggestions

- Specific code examples with before/after comparisons where helpful


Format your response as structured JSON with clear sections for each analysis area."""

        

        return prompt

    

    def _build_architecture_prompt(self, context: AnalysisContext, 

                                 config: Dict[str, Any]) -> str:

        """Build architectural analysis prompt focusing on system design."""

        relationships = self._format_relationships_for_prompt(context.relationship_graph)

        entities = self._format_entities_for_prompt(context.primary_entities)

        

        prompt = f"""You are a senior software architect with expertise in system design and architectural patterns. Analyze the following codebase structure and relationships for architectural quality and design decisions.


CODE ENTITIES AND STRUCTURE:

{entities}


COMPONENT RELATIONSHIPS:

{relationships}


ARCHITECTURAL ANALYSIS REQUIREMENTS:


1. Architecture Pattern Identification:

   - Identify architectural patterns currently implemented (MVC, MVP, MVVM, Layered, etc.)

   - Evaluate pattern implementation quality and consistency

   - Assess pattern appropriateness for the problem domain

   - Suggest alternative patterns where beneficial


2. Component and Module Analysis:

   - Analyze component boundaries and responsibilities

   - Evaluate single responsibility principle adherence

   - Assess component coupling and cohesion levels

   - Identify potential architectural violations or inconsistencies


3. Dependency Management:

   - Analyze dependency directions and identify circular dependencies

   - Evaluate dependency injection usage and patterns

   - Assess abstraction levels and interface design

   - Suggest dependency structure improvements


4. Scalability and Extensibility Assessment:

   - Evaluate architectural scalability potential

   - Identify potential bottlenecks and performance constraints

   - Assess extensibility and modification ease

   - Suggest improvements for future growth


5. Cross-Cutting Concerns:

   - Evaluate handling of logging, error management, security

   - Assess configuration management approach

   - Analyze data flow and state management

   - Review separation of concerns implementation


6. Technical Debt Assessment:

   - Identify architectural technical debt

   - Assess impact of current design decisions

   - Prioritize architectural improvements

   - Suggest migration strategies for major changes


Provide detailed architectural insights with:

- Architecture quality score (1-10)

- Current pattern identification and assessment

- Critical architectural issues

- Improvement recommendations with implementation strategies

- Long-term architectural evolution suggestions


Format as structured JSON with clear architectural assessment sections."""

        

        return prompt

    

    def _build_security_prompt(self, context: AnalysisContext, 

                             config: Dict[str, Any]) -> str:

        """Build security-focused analysis prompt."""

        primary_code = self._format_entities_for_prompt(context.primary_entities)

        

        prompt = f"""You are a cybersecurity expert specializing in secure code analysis. Examine the following code for security vulnerabilities, weaknesses, and compliance with security best practices.


CODE TO ANALYZE:

{primary_code}


SECURITY ANALYSIS REQUIREMENTS:


1. Vulnerability Assessment:

   - Identify potential security vulnerabilities (OWASP Top 10)

   - Check for injection flaws (SQL, XSS, command injection)

   - Assess authentication and authorization mechanisms

   - Evaluate input validation and sanitization


2. Data Security Analysis:

   - Assess data encryption and protection mechanisms

   - Evaluate sensitive data handling practices

   - Check for data leakage potential

   - Analyze data storage security


3. Access Control Evaluation:

   - Review authentication implementation

   - Assess authorization and permission systems

   - Evaluate session management security

   - Check for privilege escalation risks


4. Security Best Practices Compliance:

   - Evaluate secure coding practices adherence

   - Assess error handling security implications

   - Review logging and monitoring for security events

   - Check for hardcoded secrets or credentials


Provide security assessment with:

- Security risk score (1-10)

- Critical vulnerabilities requiring immediate attention

- Medium and low priority security issues

- Specific remediation recommendations

- Security best practices implementation suggestions


Format as structured JSON with vulnerability details and remediation steps."""

        

        return prompt

    

    def _format_entities_for_prompt(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> str:

        """Format code entities for inclusion in LLM prompts."""

        if not entities:

            return "No entities provided."

        

        formatted_entities = []

        for entity in entities:

            entity_info = f"""

Entity Type: {entity.entity_type}

Name: {entity.name}

Language: {entity.language.value}

File: {entity.metadata.get('file_path', 'Unknown')}

Lines: {entity.start_line}-{entity.end_line}


Signature: {entity.signature or 'N/A'}


Code:

{entity.body}


Complexity Metrics: {json.dumps(entity.complexity_metrics, indent=2)}

Dependencies: {', '.join(entity.dependencies) if entity.dependencies else 'None'}


---

"""

            formatted_entities.append(entity_info)

        

        return '\n'.join(formatted_entities)

    

    def _format_relationships_for_prompt(self, relationship_graph: nx.Graph) -> str:

        """Format relationship graph for inclusion in prompts."""

        if not relationship_graph or relationship_graph.number_of_edges() == 0:

            return "No relationships identified."

        

        relationships = []

        for source, target, data in relationship_graph.edges(data=True):

            rel_type = data.get('relationship_type', 'unknown')

            strength = data.get('strength', 0.0)

            relationships.append(f"{source} --[{rel_type}:{strength:.2f}]--> {target}")

        

        return '\n'.join(relationships)

    

    def build_chunk_analysis_prompt(self, chunk: CodeChunk, query: str) -> str:

        """Build prompt for analyzing a specific code chunk with a targeted query."""

        chunk_content = chunk.content

        chunk_metadata = {

            'entity_count': len(chunk.entities),

            'chunk_type': chunk.chunk_type,

            'dependencies': list(chunk.dependencies),

            'priority': chunk.context_priority

        }

        

        prompt = f"""You are an expert code analyst. Analyze the following code chunk and answer the specific query provided.


QUERY: {query}


CODE CHUNK TO ANALYZE:

{chunk_content}


CHUNK METADATA:

{json.dumps(chunk_metadata, indent=2)}


Please provide a detailed, specific answer to the query based on your analysis of the code chunk. Include:

- Direct observations from the code

- Specific examples and line references where relevant

- Actionable recommendations if applicable

- Any potential issues or improvements related to the query


Keep your response focused on the specific query while being thorough in your analysis."""

        

        return prompt



Response Parsing and Structuring


The response parser extracts structured information from LLM responses, ensuring consistent and actionable output across different analysis types.



class ResponseParser:

    """Parses and structures LLM analysis responses."""

    

    def parse_analysis_response(self, response: str, 

                              analysis_type: AnalysisType) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Parse LLM response into structured analysis results."""

        

        try:

            # Attempt to parse as JSON first

            if response.strip().startswith('{'):

                return json.loads(response)

        except json.JSONDecodeError:

            pass

        

        # Fallback to text parsing based on analysis type

        if analysis_type == AnalysisType.CODE_QUALITY:

            return self._parse_code_quality_response(response)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.ARCHITECTURE:

            return self._parse_architecture_response(response)

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.SECURITY:

            return self._parse_security_response(response)

        else:

            return self._parse_general_response(response)

    

    def _parse_code_quality_response(self, response: str) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Parse code quality analysis response."""

        parsed_result = {

            'analysis_type': 'code_quality',

            'overall_score': self._extract_score(response),

            'critical_issues': self._extract_issues(response, 'critical'),

            'medium_issues': self._extract_issues(response, 'medium'),

            'recommendations': self._extract_recommendations(response),

            'code_smells': self._extract_code_smells(response),

            'best_practices': self._extract_best_practices_assessment(response),

            'maintainability_score': self._extract_maintainability_score(response),

            'raw_response': response

        }

        

        return parsed_result

    

    def _parse_architecture_response(self, response: str) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Parse architectural analysis response."""

        parsed_result = {

            'analysis_type': 'architecture',

            'architecture_score': self._extract_score(response),

            'patterns_identified': self._extract_patterns(response),

            'architectural_issues': self._extract_architectural_issues(response),

            'dependency_analysis': self._extract_dependency_analysis(response),

            'scalability_assessment': self._extract_scalability_assessment(response),

            'improvement_suggestions': self._extract_architectural_improvements(response),

            'technical_debt': self._extract_technical_debt(response),

            'raw_response': response

        }

        

        return parsed_result

    

    def _parse_security_response(self, response: str) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Parse security analysis response."""

        parsed_result = {

            'analysis_type': 'security',

            'security_score': self._extract_score(response),

            'vulnerabilities': self._extract_vulnerabilities(response),

            'security_issues': self._extract_security_issues(response),

            'compliance_assessment': self._extract_compliance_assessment(response),

            'remediation_steps': self._extract_remediation_steps(response),

            'risk_assessment': self._extract_risk_assessment(response),

            'raw_response': response

        }

        

        return parsed_result

    

    def parse_chunk_response(self, response: str, query: str) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Parse response for chunk-specific analysis."""

        return {

            'query': query,

            'response': response,

            'key_findings': self._extract_key_findings(response),

            'recommendations': self._extract_recommendations(response),

            'code_references': self._extract_code_references(response),

            'severity': self._assess_finding_severity(response)

        }

    

    def _extract_score(self, response: str) -> Optional[float]:

        """Extract numerical score from response."""

        import re

        

        # Look for score patterns like "score: 7/10", "7.5/10", "Score: 8"

        score_patterns = [

            r'score[:\s]+(\d+(?:\.\d+)?)/10',

            r'score[:\s]+(\d+(?:\.\d+)?)',

            r'(\d+(?:\.\d+)?)/10',

            r'quality[:\s]+(\d+(?:\.\d+)?)'

        ]

        

        for pattern in score_patterns:

            match = re.search(pattern, response.lower())

            if match:

                try:

                    score = float(match.group(1))

                    return min(score, 10.0)  # Cap at 10

                except ValueError:

                    continue

        

        return None

    

    def _extract_issues(self, response: str, severity: str) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Extract issues of specific severity from response."""

        issues = []

        

        # Look for sections containing the severity level

        import re

        section_pattern = rf'{severity}[^:]*:?(.*?)(?={"|".join(["medium", "low", "recommendations", "suggestions"])}|$)'

        match = re.search(section_pattern, response.lower(), re.DOTALL | re.IGNORECASE)

        

        if match:

            section_text = match.group(1)

            # Extract individual issues (assuming bullet points or numbered lists)

            issue_patterns = [

                r'[-*•]\s*(.+?)(?=[-*•]|$)',

                r'\d+\.\s*(.+?)(?=\d+\.|$)'

            ]

            

            for pattern in issue_patterns:

                issue_matches = re.findall(pattern, section_text, re.DOTALL)

                for issue_text in issue_matches:

                    if issue_text.strip():

                        issues.append({

                            'description': issue_text.strip(),

                            'severity': severity,

                            'category': self._categorize_issue(issue_text)

                        })

        

        return issues

    

    def _extract_recommendations(self, response: str) -> List[str]:

        """Extract recommendations from response."""

        recommendations = []

        

        # Look for recommendation sections

        import re

        rec_patterns = [

            r'recommendations?[:\s]+(.*?)(?=\n\n|\n[A-Z]|$)',

            r'suggestions?[:\s]+(.*?)(?=\n\n|\n[A-Z]|$)',

            r'improvements?[:\s]+(.*?)(?=\n\n|\n[A-Z]|$)'

        ]

        

        for pattern in rec_patterns:

            matches = re.findall(pattern, response, re.DOTALL | re.IGNORECASE)

            for match in matches:

                # Extract individual recommendations

                rec_items = re.findall(r'[-*•]\s*(.+?)(?=[-*•]|$)', match, re.DOTALL)

                recommendations.extend([item.strip() for item in rec_items if item.strip()])

        

        return recommendations

    

    def _categorize_issue(self, issue_text: str) -> str:

        """Categorize an issue based on its content."""

        issue_lower = issue_text.lower()

        

        if any(keyword in issue_lower for keyword in ['security', 'vulnerability', 'injection', 'auth']):

            return 'security'

        elif any(keyword in issue_lower for keyword in ['performance', 'slow', 'optimization', 'memory']):

            return 'performance'

        elif any(keyword in issue_lower for keyword in ['maintainability', 'complex', 'coupling', 'cohesion']):

            return 'maintainability'

        elif any(keyword in issue_lower for keyword in ['style', 'naming', 'format', 'convention']):

            return 'style'

        else:

            return 'general'



Analysis Quality Assessment


The quality assessor ensures that LLM-generated analysis meets standards for accuracy, completeness, and actionability.



class AnalysisQualityAssessor:

    """Assesses the quality of LLM-generated analysis results."""

    

    def assess_analysis_quality(self, analysis_result: Dict[str, Any], 

                              context: AnalysisContext, 

                              analysis_type: AnalysisType) -> float:

        """Assess overall quality of analysis result."""

        

        quality_factors = {

            'completeness': self._assess_completeness(analysis_result, analysis_type),

            'specificity': self._assess_specificity(analysis_result),

            'actionability': self._assess_actionability(analysis_result),

            'accuracy': self._assess_accuracy(analysis_result, context),

            'relevance': self._assess_relevance(analysis_result, context)

        }

        

        # Weighted average of quality factors

        weights = {

            'completeness': 0.25,

            'specificity': 0.20,

            'actionability': 0.25,

            'accuracy': 0.20,

            'relevance': 0.10

        }

        

        quality_score = sum(

            quality_factors[factor] * weights[factor] 

            for factor in quality_factors

        )

        

        return min(quality_score, 1.0)

    

    def _assess_completeness(self, analysis_result: Dict[str, Any], 

                           analysis_type: AnalysisType) -> float:

        """Assess completeness of analysis based on expected sections."""

        expected_sections = self._get_expected_sections(analysis_type)

        present_sections = set(analysis_result.keys())

        

        coverage = len(present_sections.intersection(expected_sections)) / len(expected_sections)

        return coverage

    

    def _assess_specificity(self, analysis_result: Dict[str, Any]) -> float:

        """Assess how specific and detailed the analysis is."""

        specificity_score = 0.0

        

        # Check for specific code references

        raw_response = analysis_result.get('raw_response', '')

        if 'line' in raw_response.lower() or 'function' in raw_response.lower():

            specificity_score += 0.3

        

        # Check for concrete examples

        if 'example' in raw_response.lower() or 'for instance' in raw_response.lower():

            specificity_score += 0.3

        

        # Check for detailed recommendations

        recommendations = analysis_result.get('recommendations', [])

        if recommendations and len(recommendations) > 2:

            specificity_score += 0.4

        

        return min(specificity_score, 1.0)

    

    def _assess_actionability(self, analysis_result: Dict[str, Any]) -> float:

        """Assess how actionable the recommendations are."""

        actionability_score = 0.0

        

        recommendations = analysis_result.get('recommendations', [])

        if not recommendations:

            return 0.0

        

        # Check for action verbs in recommendations

        action_verbs = ['refactor', 'implement', 'add', 'remove', 'change', 'update', 'fix']

        actionable_count = 0

        

        for rec in recommendations:

            if any(verb in rec.lower() for verb in action_verbs):

                actionable_count += 1

        

        actionability_score = actionable_count / len(recommendations)

        return actionability_score

    

    def _get_expected_sections(self, analysis_type: AnalysisType) -> Set[str]:

        """Get expected sections for different analysis types."""

        base_sections = {'recommendations', 'raw_response'}

        

        if analysis_type == AnalysisType.CODE_QUALITY:

            return base_sections.union({

                'overall_score', 'critical_issues', 'code_smells', 'best_practices'

            })

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.ARCHITECTURE:

            return base_sections.union({

                'architecture_score', 'patterns_identified', 'architectural_issues'

            })

        elif analysis_type == AnalysisType.SECURITY:

            return base_sections.union({

                'security_score', 'vulnerabilities', 'security_issues'

            })

        else:

            return base_sections



The LLM Analysis Engine provides the core reasoning capabilities that transform structured code representations into meaningful insights. By implementing specialized prompts, robust response parsing, and quality assessment, the system ensures that LLM-generated analysis is accurate, actionable, and valuable for developers and architects.


Problem 5: Context-Aware Analysis with Memory Optimization


Problem Description


LLM-based code analysis faces significant challenges related to context window limitations and memory efficiency. Large codebases can easily exceed token limits, while maintaining relevant context across multiple analysis sessions requires sophisticated memory management. The system must balance comprehensive analysis with computational efficiency.


Solution Architecture


The Context-Aware Analysis Engine implements a multi-tiered approach to context management, combining intelligent context selection, hierarchical memory structures, and adaptive optimization strategies.



from typing import List, Dict, Any, Optional, Tuple

from dataclasses import dataclass

import json

from collections import deque

import hashlib


@dataclass

class AnalysisContext:

    """Represents analysis context with memory optimization."""

    primary_entities: List[CodeEntity]

    supporting_entities: List[CodeEntity]

    relationship_graph: nx.Graph

    analysis_history: List[Dict[str, Any]]

    context_hash: str

    priority_scores: Dict[str, float]

    token_budget: int

    optimization_metadata: Dict[str, Any]


class ContextMemoryManager:

    """Manages context memory with optimization strategies."""

    

    def __init__(self, max_context_tokens: int = 8000):

        self.max_context_tokens = max_context_tokens

        self.context_cache = {}

        self.access_frequency = {}

        self.context_hierarchy = ContextHierarchy()

        self.compression_engine = ContextCompressionEngine()

        self.relevance_scorer = RelevanceScorer()

    

    def build_analysis_context(self, target_entities: List[CodeEntity], 

                             query: str, analysis_type: str) -> AnalysisContext:

        """Build optimized analysis context for LLM processing."""

        # Generate context hash for caching

        context_hash = self._generate_context_hash(target_entities, query, analysis_type)

        

        # Check cache first

        if context_hash in self.context_cache:

            cached_context = self.context_cache[context_hash]

            self._update_access_frequency(context_hash)

            return cached_context

        

        # Build new context

        context = self._build_fresh_context(target_entities, query, analysis_type)

        

        # Cache the context

        self._cache_context(context_hash, context)

        

        return context

    

    def _build_fresh_context(self, target_entities: List[CodeEntity], 

                           query: str, analysis_type: str) -> AnalysisContext:

        """Build a fresh analysis context with optimization."""

        # Phase 1: Priority scoring

        priority_scores = self.relevance_scorer.score_entities(target_entities, query, analysis_type)

        

        # Phase 2: Hierarchical organization

        hierarchical_context = self.context_hierarchy.organize_entities(target_entities, priority_scores)

        

        # Phase 3: Token budget allocation

        token_allocation = self._allocate_token_budget(hierarchical_context, priority_scores)

        

        # Phase 4: Context compression if needed

        if token_allocation['total_tokens'] > self.max_context_tokens:

            compressed_context = self.compression_engine.compress_context(

                hierarchical_context, token_allocation, self.max_context_tokens

            )

        else:

            compressed_context = hierarchical_context

        

        # Phase 5: Build final context

        analysis_context = AnalysisContext(

            primary_entities=compressed_context['primary'],

            supporting_entities=compressed_context['supporting'],

            relationship_graph=compressed_context['relationships'],

            analysis_history=[],

            context_hash=self._generate_context_hash(target_entities, query, analysis_type),

            priority_scores=priority_scores,

            token_budget=self.max_context_tokens,

            optimization_metadata=compressed_context['metadata']

        )

        

        return analysis_context

    

    def _allocate_token_budget(self, hierarchical_context: Dict[str, Any], 

                             priority_scores: Dict[str, float]) -> Dict[str, int]:

        """Allocate token budget based on entity priorities."""

        total_available = self.max_context_tokens

        

        # Reserve tokens for system prompts and response

        system_overhead = 1000

        response_budget = 1500

        available_for_context = total_available - system_overhead - response_budget

        

        # Calculate entity token requirements

        entity_tokens = {}

        total_required = 0

        

        for level, entities in hierarchical_context.items():

            level_tokens = 0

            for entity in entities:

                entity_token_count = self._estimate_entity_tokens(entity)

                entity_tokens[entity.name] = entity_token_count

                level_tokens += entity_token_count

            total_required += level_tokens

        

        # Allocate proportionally if over budget

        if total_required > available_for_context:

            scaling_factor = available_for_context / total_required

            for entity_name in entity_tokens:

                entity_tokens[entity_name] = int(entity_tokens[entity_name] * scaling_factor)

        

        return {

            'entity_tokens': entity_tokens,

            'total_tokens': sum(entity_tokens.values()),

            'available_budget': available_for_context,

            'scaling_applied': total_required > available_for_context

        }



Hierarchical Context Organization


The system organizes context information in a hierarchical structure that prioritizes the most relevant information while maintaining supporting context for comprehensive analysis.



class ContextHierarchy:

    """Organizes context in hierarchical levels based on relevance."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.level_definitions = {

            'critical': {'priority_threshold': 0.8, 'max_entities': 5},

            'important': {'priority_threshold': 0.6, 'max_entities': 10},

            'supporting': {'priority_threshold': 0.4, 'max_entities': 15},

            'background': {'priority_threshold': 0.2, 'max_entities': 20}

        }

    

    def organize_entities(self, entities: List[CodeEntity], 

                         priority_scores: Dict[str, float]) -> Dict[str, List[CodeEntity]]:

        """Organize entities into hierarchical levels."""

        organized_context = {level: [] for level in self.level_definitions.keys()}

        

        # Sort entities by priority score

        sorted_entities = sorted(entities, 

                               key=lambda e: priority_scores.get(e.name, 0.0), 

                               reverse=True)

        

        # Assign entities to levels

        for entity in sorted_entities:

            entity_priority = priority_scores.get(entity.name, 0.0)

            assigned = False

            

            for level, config in self.level_definitions.items():

                if (entity_priority >= config['priority_threshold'] and 

                    len(organized_context[level]) < config['max_entities']):

                    organized_context[level].append(entity)

                    assigned = True

                    break

            

            # If not assigned to any level, add to background if space available

            if not assigned and len(organized_context['background']) < self.level_definitions['background']['max_entities']:

                organized_context['background'].append(entity)

        

        # Build relationship subgraph for organized entities

        all_organized_entities = []

        for level_entities in organized_context.values():

            all_organized_entities.extend(level_entities)

        

        relationship_graph = self._build_relationship_subgraph(all_organized_entities)

        organized_context['relationships'] = relationship_graph

        

        return organized_context

    

    def _build_relationship_subgraph(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> nx.Graph:

        """Build a subgraph of relationships between organized entities."""

        subgraph = nx.Graph()

        entity_names = {entity.name for entity in entities}

        

        # Add nodes

        for entity in entities:

            subgraph.add_node(entity.name, entity_data=entity)

        

        # Add edges based on dependencies and relationships

        for entity in entities:

            for dependency in entity.dependencies:

                if dependency in entity_names:

                    subgraph.add_edge(entity.name, dependency, relationship_type='dependency')

        

        return subgraph



Context Compression and Optimization


When context exceeds token limits, the system employs intelligent compression strategies that preserve the most important information while reducing token usage.



class ContextCompressionEngine:

    """Compresses context while preserving essential information."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.summarization_model = CodeSummarizationModel()

        self.abstraction_engine = CodeAbstractionEngine()

        self.essential_extractor = EssentialInformationExtractor()

    

    def compress_context(self, hierarchical_context: Dict[str, List[CodeEntity]], 

                        token_allocation: Dict[str, int], 

                        max_tokens: int) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Compress context to fit within token limits."""

        compressed_context = {

            'primary': [],

            'supporting': [],

            'relationships': nx.Graph(),

            'metadata': {'compression_applied': True, 'compression_ratio': 0.0}

        }

        

        total_original_tokens = token_allocation['total_tokens']

        compression_target = max_tokens * 0.7  # Leave buffer for processing

        

        # Compress each level with different strategies

        for level, entities in hierarchical_context.items():

            if level == 'relationships':

                continue

                

            if level in ['critical', 'important']:

                # Preserve critical and important entities with minimal compression

                compressed_entities = self._light_compression(entities)

                if level == 'critical':

                    compressed_context['primary'].extend(compressed_entities)

                else:

                    compressed_context['supporting'].extend(compressed_entities)

            

            elif level in ['supporting', 'background']:

                # Apply heavy compression or summarization

                compressed_entities = self._heavy_compression(entities)

                compressed_context['supporting'].extend(compressed_entities)

        

        # Compress relationships

        compressed_context['relationships'] = self._compress_relationship_graph(

            hierarchical_context.get('relationships', nx.Graph())

        )

        

        # Calculate compression ratio

        final_token_count = self._estimate_compressed_token_count(compressed_context)

        compression_ratio = final_token_count / total_original_tokens if total_original_tokens > 0 else 1.0

        compressed_context['metadata']['compression_ratio'] = compression_ratio

        

        return compressed_context

    

    def _light_compression(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeEntity]:

        """Apply light compression preserving most information."""

        compressed_entities = []

        

        for entity in entities:

            # Extract essential information

            essential_info = self.essential_extractor.extract_essentials(entity)

            

            # Create compressed version

            compressed_entity = CodeEntity(

                entity_type=entity.entity_type,

                name=entity.name,

                signature=entity.signature,

                body=essential_info['compressed_body'],

                start_line=entity.start_line,

                end_line=entity.end_line,

                language=entity.language,

                metadata={

                    **essential_info['essential_metadata'],

                    'compression_level': 'light',

                    'original_size': len(entity.body)

                },

                dependencies=entity.dependencies,

                complexity_metrics=entity.complexity_metrics

            )

            

            compressed_entities.append(compressed_entity)

        

        return compressed_entities

    

    def _heavy_compression(self, entities: List[CodeEntity]) -> List[CodeEntity]:

        """Apply heavy compression with summarization."""

        if not entities:

            return []

        

        # Group similar entities for batch summarization

        entity_groups = self._group_similar_entities(entities)

        compressed_entities = []

        

        for group in entity_groups:

            if len(group) == 1:

                # Single entity - apply individual compression

                summary = self.summarization_model.summarize_entity(group[0])

                compressed_entity = self._create_summary_entity(group[0], summary)

                compressed_entities.append(compressed_entity)

            else:

                # Multiple entities - create group summary

                group_summary = self.summarization_model.summarize_entity_group(group)

                summary_entity = self._create_group_summary_entity(group, group_summary)

                compressed_entities.append(summary_entity)

        

        return compressed_entities



Adaptive Context Management


The system continuously learns from analysis patterns to optimize context selection and memory usage over time.



class AdaptiveContextManager:

    """Manages context adaptation based on usage patterns."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.usage_patterns = {}

        self.effectiveness_metrics = {}

        self.adaptation_strategies = {}

        self.learning_rate = 0.1

    

    def update_context_effectiveness(self, context_hash: str, 

                                   analysis_results: Dict[str, Any], 

                                   user_feedback: Optional[Dict[str, Any]] = None) -> None:

        """Update context effectiveness based on analysis results and feedback."""

        if context_hash not in self.effectiveness_metrics:

            self.effectiveness_metrics[context_hash] = {

                'accuracy_score': 0.0,

                'completeness_score': 0.0,

                'efficiency_score': 0.0,

                'user_satisfaction': 0.0,

                'usage_count': 0

            }

        

        metrics = self.effectiveness_metrics[context_hash]

        

        # Update metrics based on analysis results

        if 'accuracy_indicators' in analysis_results:

            new_accuracy = self._calculate_accuracy_score(analysis_results['accuracy_indicators'])

            metrics['accuracy_score'] = self._update_metric(metrics['accuracy_score'], new_accuracy)

        

        if 'completeness_indicators' in analysis_results:

            new_completeness = self._calculate_completeness_score(analysis_results['completeness_indicators'])

            metrics['completeness_score'] = self._update_metric(metrics['completeness_score'], new_completeness)

        

        # Update efficiency based on token usage and processing time

        if 'performance_metrics' in analysis_results:

            new_efficiency = self._calculate_efficiency_score(analysis_results['performance_metrics'])

            metrics['efficiency_score'] = self._update_metric(metrics['efficiency_score'], new_efficiency)

        

        # Incorporate user feedback if available

        if user_feedback:

            user_score = user_feedback.get('satisfaction_score', 0.5)

            metrics['user_satisfaction'] = self._update_metric(metrics['user_satisfaction'], user_score)

        

        metrics['usage_count'] += 1

        

        # Adapt strategies based on updated metrics

        self._adapt_context_strategies(context_hash, metrics)

    

    def _update_metric(self, current_value: float, new_value: float) -> float:

        """Update metric using exponential moving average."""

        return current_value * (1 - self.learning_rate) + new_value * self.learning_rate

    

    def _adapt_context_strategies(self, context_hash: str, metrics: Dict[str, float]) -> None:

        """Adapt context strategies based on effectiveness metrics."""

        overall_effectiveness = (

            metrics['accuracy_score'] * 0.3 +

            metrics['completeness_score'] * 0.3 +

            metrics['efficiency_score'] * 0.2 +

            metrics['user_satisfaction'] * 0.2

        )

        

        if context_hash not in self.adaptation_strategies:

            self.adaptation_strategies[context_hash] = {

                'compression_threshold': 0.7,

                'priority_boost': 1.0,

                'relationship_depth': 2

            }

        

        strategy = self.adaptation_strategies[context_hash]

        

        # Adapt based on effectiveness

        if overall_effectiveness < 0.6:

            # Low effectiveness - reduce compression, increase context

            strategy['compression_threshold'] = max(0.5, strategy['compression_threshold'] - 0.1)

            strategy['relationship_depth'] = min(3, strategy['relationship_depth'] + 1)

        elif overall_effectiveness > 0.8:

            # High effectiveness - can afford more compression

            strategy['compression_threshold'] = min(0.9, strategy['compression_threshold'] + 0.05)

        

        # Adapt based on specific metric weaknesses

        if metrics['completeness_score'] < 0.5:

            strategy['relationship_depth'] = min(4, strategy['relationship_depth'] + 1)

        

        if metrics['efficiency_score'] < 0.5:

            strategy['compression_threshold'] = min(0.9, strategy['compression_threshold'] + 0.1)



The context-aware analysis engine provides a sophisticated framework for managing LLM interactions with large codebases. By implementing hierarchical organization, intelligent compression, and adaptive optimization, the system maintains high analysis quality while respecting computational constraints.


Problem 6: Advanced Optimization Techniques


Problem Description


Large-scale code analysis requires sophisticated optimization techniques to maintain performance and accuracy. The system must handle codebases with millions of lines of code while providing real-time analysis capabilities. This necessitates optimizations at multiple levels including caching, parallel processing, incremental analysis, and intelligent preprocessing.


Solution Architecture


The optimization framework implements a multi-layered approach combining caching strategies, parallel processing, incremental updates, and predictive prefetching to achieve optimal performance.



import asyncio

import concurrent.futures

from typing import List, Dict, Any, Optional, Set

from dataclasses import dataclass

import threading

import time

from collections import defaultdict

import pickle

import hashlib


@dataclass

class OptimizationMetrics:

    """Tracks optimization performance metrics."""

    cache_hit_rate: float

    average_processing_time: float

    memory_usage_mb: float

    parallel_efficiency: float

    incremental_update_ratio: float

    prefetch_accuracy: float


class PerformanceOptimizer:

    """Comprehensive performance optimization system."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.cache_manager = MultiLevelCacheManager()

        self.parallel_processor = ParallelProcessingEngine()

        self.incremental_analyzer = IncrementalAnalysisEngine()

        self.prefetch_predictor = PrefetchPredictor()

        self.metrics_collector = MetricsCollector()

        self.optimization_config = OptimizationConfig()

    

    async def optimize_analysis_pipeline(self, analysis_request: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Optimize the entire analysis pipeline for maximum performance."""

        start_time = time.time()

        

        # Phase 1: Check cache for complete results

        cache_result = await self.cache_manager.get_cached_result(analysis_request)

        if cache_result:

            self.metrics_collector.record_cache_hit()

            return cache_result

        

        # Phase 2: Incremental analysis check

        incremental_result = await self.incremental_analyzer.check_incremental_update(analysis_request)

        if incremental_result:

            self.metrics_collector.record_incremental_hit()

            return incremental_result

        

        # Phase 3: Parallel processing optimization

        optimized_tasks = self.parallel_processor.optimize_task_distribution(analysis_request)

        

        # Phase 4: Predictive prefetching

        prefetch_tasks = self.prefetch_predictor.predict_future_needs(analysis_request)

        asyncio.create_task(self._execute_prefetch_tasks(prefetch_tasks))

        

        # Phase 5: Execute optimized analysis

        results = await self.parallel_processor.execute_parallel_analysis(optimized_tasks)

        

        # Phase 6: Cache results for future use

        await self.cache_manager.cache_results(analysis_request, results)

        

        # Phase 7: Update metrics

        processing_time = time.time() - start_time

        self.metrics_collector.record_processing_time(processing_time)

        

        return results



Multi-Level Caching System


The caching system implements multiple levels of caching to optimize different aspects of the analysis pipeline.



class MultiLevelCacheManager:

    """Multi-level caching system with intelligent eviction."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.l1_cache = {}  # In-memory cache for frequent access

        self.l2_cache = {}  # Compressed cache for medium-term storage

        self.l3_cache = PersistentCache()  # Disk-based cache for long-term storage

        self.cache_stats = defaultdict(int)

        self.access_patterns = defaultdict(list)

        self.cache_locks = defaultdict(threading.RLock)

        

        # Cache configuration

        self.l1_max_size = 1000

        self.l2_max_size = 5000

        self.compression_threshold = 10000  # bytes

    

    async def get_cached_result(self, request: Dict[str, Any]) -> Optional[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Retrieve cached result from appropriate cache level."""

        cache_key = self._generate_cache_key(request)

        

        # Check L1 cache first (fastest)

        with self.cache_locks[cache_key]:

            if cache_key in self.l1_cache:

                self.cache_stats['l1_hits'] += 1

                self._update_access_pattern(cache_key, 'l1')

                return self.l1_cache[cache_key]

        

        # Check L2 cache (compressed)

        if cache_key in self.l2_cache:

            self.cache_stats['l2_hits'] += 1

            compressed_data = self.l2_cache[cache_key]

            decompressed_result = self._decompress_cache_data(compressed_data)

            

            # Promote to L1 cache if frequently accessed

            if self._should_promote_to_l1(cache_key):

                self._promote_to_l1(cache_key, decompressed_result)

            

            self._update_access_pattern(cache_key, 'l2')

            return decompressed_result

        

        # Check L3 cache (persistent)

        l3_result = await self.l3_cache.get(cache_key)

        if l3_result:

            self.cache_stats['l3_hits'] += 1

            

            # Promote to appropriate level based on access pattern

            if self._should_promote_to_l2(cache_key):

                compressed_data = self._compress_cache_data(l3_result)

                self.l2_cache[cache_key] = compressed_data

            

            self._update_access_pattern(cache_key, 'l3')

            return l3_result

        

        # Cache miss

        self.cache_stats['misses'] += 1

        return None

    

    async def cache_results(self, request: Dict[str, Any], results: Dict[str, Any]) -> None:

        """Cache results at appropriate level based on size and access patterns."""

        cache_key = self._generate_cache_key(request)

        result_size = self._estimate_data_size(results)

        

        # Determine appropriate cache level

        if result_size < self.compression_threshold and len(self.l1_cache) < self.l1_max_size:

            # Store in L1 cache

            with self.cache_locks[cache_key]:

                self.l1_cache[cache_key] = results

                self._manage_l1_eviction()

        

        elif len(self.l2_cache) < self.l2_max_size:

            # Store in L2 cache with compression

            compressed_data = self._compress_cache_data(results)

            self.l2_cache[cache_key] = compressed_data

            self._manage_l2_eviction()

        

        else:

            # Store in L3 cache (persistent)

            await self.l3_cache.set(cache_key, results)

    

    def _manage_l1_eviction(self) -> None:

        """Manage L1 cache eviction using LRU with access frequency consideration."""

        if len(self.l1_cache) > self.l1_max_size:

            # Calculate eviction scores based on recency and frequency

            eviction_candidates = []

            current_time = time.time()

            

            for cache_key in self.l1_cache:

                access_history = self.access_patterns[cache_key]

                if access_history:

                    last_access = access_history[-1]

                    access_frequency = len(access_history)

                    recency_score = 1.0 / (current_time - last_access + 1)

                    frequency_score = access_frequency / 100.0  # Normalize

                    

                    # Combined score favoring both recent and frequent access

                    eviction_score = recency_score * 0.7 + frequency_score * 0.3

                    eviction_candidates.append((cache_key, eviction_score))

            

            # Sort by eviction score (lowest first) and remove least valuable entries

            eviction_candidates.sort(key=lambda x: x[1])

            entries_to_remove = len(self.l1_cache) - self.l1_max_size + 1

            

            for cache_key, _ in eviction_candidates[:entries_to_remove]:

                # Move to L2 cache before evicting from L1

                if cache_key in self.l1_cache:

                    data = self.l1_cache[cache_key]

                    compressed_data = self._compress_cache_data(data)

                    self.l2_cache[cache_key] = compressed_data

                    del self.l1_cache[cache_key]



Parallel Processing Engine


The parallel processing engine optimizes task distribution and execution across multiple cores and processes.



class ParallelProcessingEngine:

    """Advanced parallel processing with intelligent task distribution."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.thread_pool = concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=8)

        self.process_pool = concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor(max_workers=4)

        self.task_scheduler = TaskScheduler()

        self.load_balancer = LoadBalancer()

        self.dependency_resolver = DependencyResolver()

    

    def optimize_task_distribution(self, analysis_request: Dict[str, Any]) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Optimize task distribution for parallel execution."""

        # Parse analysis request into individual tasks

        raw_tasks = self._decompose_analysis_request(analysis_request)

        

        # Resolve task dependencies

        dependency_graph = self.dependency_resolver.build_dependency_graph(raw_tasks)

        

        # Optimize task scheduling

        optimized_schedule = self.task_scheduler.optimize_schedule(dependency_graph)

        

        # Balance load across available resources

        balanced_tasks = self.load_balancer.balance_task_load(optimized_schedule)

        

        return balanced_tasks

    

    async def execute_parallel_analysis(self, optimized_tasks: List[Dict[str, Any]]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Execute analysis tasks in parallel with dependency management."""

        task_results = {}

        completed_tasks = set()

        pending_tasks = {task['id']: task for task in optimized_tasks}

        

        # Execute tasks in dependency order

        while pending_tasks:

            # Find tasks ready for execution (dependencies satisfied)

            ready_tasks = []

            for task_id, task in pending_tasks.items():

                dependencies = task.get('dependencies', [])

                if all(dep in completed_tasks for dep in dependencies):

                    ready_tasks.append(task)

            

            if not ready_tasks:

                raise RuntimeError("Circular dependency detected in task graph")

            

            # Execute ready tasks in parallel

            execution_futures = []

            for task in ready_tasks:

                if task['type'] == 'cpu_intensive':

                    future = self.process_pool.submit(self._execute_cpu_task, task)

                else:

                    future = self.thread_pool.submit(self._execute_io_task, task)

                

                execution_futures.append((task['id'], future))

                del pending_tasks[task['id']]

            

            # Wait for completion and collect results

            for task_id, future in execution_futures:

                try:

                    result = future.result(timeout=300)  # 5 minute timeout

                    task_results[task_id] = result

                    completed_tasks.add(task_id)

                except Exception as e:

                    raise RuntimeError(f"Task {task_id} failed: {str(e)}")

        

        # Combine results into final analysis

        final_result = self._combine_task_results(task_results)

        return final_result

    

    def _execute_cpu_task(self, task: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Execute CPU-intensive analysis task."""

        task_type = task['task_type']

        task_data = task['data']

        

        if task_type == 'syntax_analysis':

            return self._perform_syntax_analysis(task_data)

        elif task_type == 'complexity_calculation':

            return self._calculate_complexity_metrics(task_data)

        elif task_type == 'relationship_extraction':

            return self._extract_relationships(task_data)

        else:

            raise ValueError(f"Unknown CPU task type: {task_type}")

    

    def _execute_io_task(self, task: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Execute I/O-intensive analysis task."""

        task_type = task['task_type']

        task_data = task['data']

        

        if task_type == 'file_parsing':

            return self._parse_source_files(task_data)

        elif task_type == 'embedding_generation':

            return self._generate_embeddings(task_data)

        elif task_type == 'graph_storage':

            return self._store_graph_data(task_data)

        else:

            raise ValueError(f"Unknown I/O task type: {task_type}")



Incremental Analysis Engine


The incremental analysis engine minimizes redundant processing by tracking changes and updating only affected components.



class IncrementalAnalysisEngine:

    """Manages incremental analysis with change tracking."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.change_tracker = ChangeTracker()

        self.dependency_tracker = DependencyTracker()

        self.analysis_cache = AnalysisCache()

        self.impact_analyzer = ImpactAnalyzer()

    

    async def check_incremental_update(self, analysis_request: Dict[str, Any]) -> Optional[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Check if analysis can be performed incrementally."""

        # Detect changes since last analysis

        changes = self.change_tracker.detect_changes(analysis_request)

        

        if not changes:

            # No changes detected - return cached result

            return await self.analysis_cache.get_cached_analysis(analysis_request)

        

        # Analyze impact of changes

        impact_analysis = self.impact_analyzer.analyze_change_impact(changes)

        

        # Determine if incremental update is beneficial

        if self._should_perform_incremental_update(impact_analysis):

            return await self._perform_incremental_update(analysis_request, changes, impact_analysis)

        

        # Full analysis required

        return None

    

    async def _perform_incremental_update(self, analysis_request: Dict[str, Any], 

                                        changes: List[Dict[str, Any]], 

                                        impact_analysis: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Perform incremental analysis update."""

        # Get base analysis from cache

        base_analysis = await self.analysis_cache.get_cached_analysis(analysis_request)

        if not base_analysis:

            return None  # No base analysis available

        

        # Process only affected components

        affected_entities = impact_analysis['affected_entities']

        affected_relationships = impact_analysis['affected_relationships']

        

        # Update affected entities

        updated_entities = {}

        for entity_id in affected_entities:

            entity_data = self._get_entity_data(entity_id, changes)

            if entity_data:

                updated_analysis = await self._analyze_single_entity(entity_data)

                updated_entities[entity_id] = updated_analysis

        

        # Update affected relationships

        updated_relationships = {}

        for relationship_id in affected_relationships:

            relationship_data = self._get_relationship_data(relationship_id, changes)

            if relationship_data:

                updated_relationship = await self._analyze_single_relationship(relationship_data)

                updated_relationships[relationship_id] = updated_relationship

        

        # Merge updates with base analysis

        incremental_result = self._merge_incremental_updates(

            base_analysis, updated_entities, updated_relationships

        )

        

        # Update cache with new result

        await self.analysis_cache.update_cached_analysis(analysis_request, incremental_result)

        

        return incremental_result

    

    def _should_perform_incremental_update(self, impact_analysis: Dict[str, Any]) -> bool:

        """Determine if incremental update is more efficient than full analysis."""

        total_entities = impact_analysis['total_entities']

        affected_entities = len(impact_analysis['affected_entities'])

        

        # Use incremental update if less than 30% of entities are affected

        incremental_threshold = 0.3

        impact_ratio = affected_entities / total_entities if total_entities > 0 else 1.0

        

        return impact_ratio < incremental_threshold



Predictive Prefetching System


The prefetching system anticipates future analysis needs and preloads relevant data to reduce latency.



class PrefetchPredictor:

    """Predicts and prefetches likely future analysis requests."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.usage_pattern_analyzer = UsagePatternAnalyzer()

        self.prediction_model = PredictionModel()

        self.prefetch_scheduler = PrefetchScheduler()

        self.prefetch_cache = PrefetchCache()

    

    def predict_future_needs(self, current_request: Dict[str, Any]) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Predict likely future analysis requests based on current request."""

        # Analyze current request context

        request_context = self._extract_request_context(current_request)

        

        # Get historical usage patterns

        similar_patterns = self.usage_pattern_analyzer.find_similar_patterns(request_context)

        

        # Generate predictions using machine learning model

        predictions = self.prediction_model.predict_next_requests(request_context, similar_patterns)

        

        # Filter and prioritize predictions

        prioritized_predictions = self._prioritize_predictions(predictions, current_request)

        

        # Convert to prefetch tasks

        prefetch_tasks = self._create_prefetch_tasks(prioritized_predictions)

        

        return prefetch_tasks

    

    def _extract_request_context(self, request: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Extract contextual features from analysis request."""

        context = {

            'file_types': self._extract_file_types(request),

            'analysis_types': request.get('analysis_types', []),

            'project_structure': self._analyze_project_structure(request),

            'user_patterns': self._extract_user_patterns(request),

            'time_context': self._extract_time_context(request)

        }

        

        return context

    

    def _prioritize_predictions(self, predictions: List[Dict[str, Any]], 

                              current_request: Dict[str, Any]) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:

        """Prioritize predictions based on likelihood and value."""

        prioritized = []

        

        for prediction in predictions:

            # Calculate priority score

            likelihood = prediction['likelihood']

            value = self._calculate_prediction_value(prediction, current_request)

            cost = self._estimate_prefetch_cost(prediction)

            

            priority_score = (likelihood * value) / (cost + 1)

            

            prediction['priority_score'] = priority_score

            prioritized.append(prediction)

        

        # Sort by priority score and return top predictions

        prioritized.sort(key=lambda x: x['priority_score'], reverse=True)

        return prioritized[:10]  # Limit to top 10 predictions

    

    async def execute_prefetch_tasks(self, prefetch_tasks: List[Dict[str, Any]]) -> None:

        """Execute prefetch tasks asynchronously."""

        for task in prefetch_tasks:

            try:

                # Check if already cached

                if await self.prefetch_cache.is_cached(task['request']):

                    continue

                

                # Execute prefetch analysis

                prefetch_result = await self._execute_prefetch_analysis(task['request'])

                

                # Cache prefetch result

                await self.prefetch_cache.cache_prefetch_result(task['request'], prefetch_result)

                

            except Exception as e:

                # Log prefetch failure but don't interrupt main analysis

                print(f"Prefetch task failed: {str(e)}")

                continue



The comprehensive optimization framework provides significant performance improvements through intelligent caching, parallel processing, incremental analysis, and predictive prefetching. These optimizations work together to create a highly efficient code analysis system capable of handling large-scale codebases while maintaining real-time responsiveness.


Integration and System Coordination


The various components of the LLM-based code analyzer must work together seamlessly to provide comprehensive analysis capabilities. The integration layer coordinates between the language processing pipeline, chunking engine, GraphRAG store, LLM analysis engine, context-aware analysis engine, and optimization framework.



class CodeAnalysisOrchestrator:

    """Main orchestrator coordinating all analysis components with full LLM integration."""

    

    def __init__(self):

        self.language_processors = self._initialize_language_processors()

        self.chunking_engine = SemanticChunkingEngine()

        self.graph_store = GraphRAGStore()

        self.context_manager = ContextMemoryManager()

        self.analysis_engine = LLMAnalysisEngine()  # Core LLM integration

        self.optimizer = PerformanceOptimizer()

        self.relationship_extractor = RelationshipExtractor()

        self.synthesis_engine = AnalysisSynthesisEngine()

    

    async def analyze_codebase(self, codebase_path: str, 

                             analysis_config: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Perform comprehensive LLM-based codebase analysis."""

        

        # Phase 1: Discovery and parsing

        discovered_files = await self._discover_source_files(codebase_path)

        parsed_entities = await self._parse_all_files(discovered_files)

        

        # Phase 2: Relationship extraction and graph construction

        relationships = self.relationship_extractor.extract_relationships(parsed_entities)

        await self._populate_graph_store(parsed_entities, relationships)

        

        # Phase 3: Intelligent chunking

        optimized_chunks = self.chunking_engine.create_optimized_chunks(parsed_entities)

        

        # Phase 4: LLM-based contextual analysis

        analysis_results = await self._perform_llm_analysis(

            optimized_chunks, analysis_config

        )

        

        # Phase 5: LLM-based synthesis and insights

        final_report = await self._synthesize_with_llm(analysis_results, analysis_config)

        

        return final_report

    

    async def _perform_llm_analysis(self, chunks: List[CodeChunk], 

                                  config: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Perform LLM-based analysis on code chunks with GraphRAG context."""

        analysis_results = {}

        

        for chunk in chunks:

            # Build GraphRAG-enhanced context for this chunk

            related_entity_ids = []

            for entity in chunk.entities:

                entity_id = self.graph_store._generate_entity_id(entity)

                related_ids = self.graph_store.find_related_entities(entity_id, max_depth=2)

                related_entity_ids.extend(related_ids)

            

            # Retrieve related entities from graph store

            related_entities = []

            for entity_id in set(related_entity_ids):

                entity = self.graph_store.get_entity(entity_id)

                if entity:

                    related_entities.append(entity)

            

            # Build optimized context using context manager

            context = self.context_manager.build_analysis_context(

                chunk.entities + related_entities,

                config.get('query', ''), 

                config.get('analysis_type', 'general')

            )

            

            # Perform LLM analysis with enriched context

            chunk_analysis = await self.analysis_engine.analyze_with_context(context, config)

            

            # Store results with metadata

            analysis_results[chunk.chunk_id] = {

                **chunk_analysis,

                'chunk_metadata': {

                    'entity_count': len(chunk.entities),

                    'related_entity_count': len(related_entities),

                    'context_size': len(context.primary_entities) + len(context.supporting_entities),

                    'chunk_priority': chunk.context_priority

                }

            }

        

        return analysis_results

    

    async def _synthesize_with_llm(self, analysis_results: Dict[str, Any], 

                                 config: Dict[str, Any]) -> Dict[str, Any]:

        """Use LLM to synthesize final insights from chunk analyses."""

        

        # Prepare synthesis data

        synthesis_data = {

            'chunk_count': len(analysis_results),

            'analysis_type': config.get('analysis_type', 'general'),

            'key_findings': self._extract_key_findings(analysis_results),

            'quality_scores': self._extract_quality_scores(analysis_results),

            'common_issues': self._identify_common_issues(analysis_results),

            'architectural_patterns': self._identify_architectural_patterns(analysis_results)

        }

        

        # Build synthesis prompt

        synthesis_prompt = self._build_synthesis_prompt(synthesis_data, analysis_results)

        

        # Generate synthesis using LLM

        synthesis_response = await self.analysis_engine.llm_client.generate_response(

            synthesis_prompt, 

            max_tokens=3000,

            temperature=0.1

        )

        

        # Parse synthesis response

        parsed_synthesis = self.analysis_engine.response_parser.parse_synthesis_response(

            synthesis_response, config.get('analysis_type', 'general')

        )

        

        return {

            'executive_summary': parsed_synthesis,

            'individual_analyses': analysis_results,

            'synthesis_metadata': {

                'analysis_timestamp': time.time(),

                'chunks_analyzed': len(analysis_results),

                'analysis_type': config.get('analysis_type', 'general'),

                'total_entities': sum(

                    result['chunk_metadata']['entity_count'] 

                    for result in analysis_results.values()

                ),

                'synthesis_quality_score': parsed_synthesis.get('quality_score', 0.0)

            }

        }

    

    def _build_synthesis_prompt(self, synthesis_data: Dict[str, Any], 

                              analysis_results: Dict[str, Any]) -> str:

        """Build comprehensive synthesis prompt for LLM."""

        

        analysis_type = synthesis_data['analysis_type']

        

        prompt = f"""You are a senior software architect and technical lead. Synthesize the following code analysis results into comprehensive insights and actionable recommendations.


ANALYSIS OVERVIEW:

- Analysis Type: {analysis_type}

- Chunks Analyzed: {synthesis_data['chunk_count']}

- Overall Quality Scores: {json.dumps(synthesis_data['quality_scores'], indent=2)}


KEY FINDINGS SUMMARY:

{json.dumps(synthesis_data['key_findings'], indent=2)}


COMMON ISSUES IDENTIFIED:

{json.dumps(synthesis_data['common_issues'], indent=2)}


ARCHITECTURAL PATTERNS:

{json.dumps(synthesis_data['architectural_patterns'], indent=2)}


DETAILED CHUNK ANALYSES:

{json.dumps(analysis_results, indent=2)}


SYNTHESIS REQUIREMENTS:


1. Executive Summary:

   - Overall codebase health assessment

   - Critical findings that require immediate attention

   - Positive aspects and strengths identified

   - Risk assessment and impact analysis


2. Prioritized Action Plan:

   - Critical issues requiring immediate action

   - Medium-term improvements and refactoring opportunities

   - Long-term architectural evolution recommendations

   - Resource allocation suggestions


3. Technical Insights:

   - Code quality trends and patterns

   - Architectural strengths and weaknesses

   - Technology stack assessment

   - Maintainability and scalability evaluation


4. Best Practices Recommendations:

   - Development process improvements

   - Code review and quality assurance enhancements

   - Documentation and knowledge sharing suggestions

   - Tool and framework recommendations


5. Implementation Roadmap:

   - Phased approach to addressing identified issues

   - Success metrics and monitoring strategies

   - Team training and skill development needs

   - Timeline and milestone suggestions


Please provide a comprehensive synthesis that transforms technical findings into strategic insights and actionable business recommendations. Include specific examples from the analysis where relevant.


Format your response as structured JSON with clear sections for each synthesis requirement."""

        

        return prompt