I think J. Michael Dean wrote:
Sorry. I was reading the manual Section 8.2 (Definstance facts),
where you postulate a Java Bean called ExampleBean. That's sitting
in Java. The next paragraph shows, from an interactive session with
Jess, the command (defclass simple ExampleBean). How
I think J. Michael Dean wrote:
I think I have resolved my internal confusion. I am thinking about
Jess rules as being type-safe, which is nonsense. So if I have a
rule file that refers to some kind of fact that does not exist, there
will be no error - the rules that depend on that fact
Ridiculous question. I have a Bean in Java. I want to have Jess
build itself a template for a shadow fact. But Jess does not know
about the Bean. How does one tell Jess about the classes that have
been created in Java? Right now, I manually create a fact in Jess
and move the values
I think mdean77 wrote:
Ridiculous question. I have a Bean in Java. I want to have Jess
build itself a template for a shadow fact. But Jess does not know
about the Bean. How does one tell Jess about the classes that have
been created in Java? Right now, I manually create a fact in
Speaking of which :-) when is the 2nd edition of Jess In Action
coming out? Giarratano and Riley are now into their FOURTH edition
since first edition came out in 1989. I think I have all three
somewhere - the older ones probably in boxes somewhere but the 3rd
edition is pretty well
I think I have resolved my internal confusion. I am thinking about
Jess rules as being type-safe, which is nonsense. So if I have a
rule file that refers to some kind of fact that does not exist, there
will be no error - the rules that depend on that fact simply will not
fire. So if I
Sorry. I was reading the manual Section 8.2 (Definstance facts),
where you postulate a Java Bean called ExampleBean. That's sitting
in Java. The next paragraph shows, from an interactive session with
Jess, the command (defclass simple ExampleBean). How does Jess know
about ExampleBean