but in reality it consumed by many humans. Thus, in many cases
one needs to be aware
of this fact (it may be consumed by humans) when designing new XML dialects.
Agustin Gonzalez, Ph.D.
Director
Town Lake Software
www.townlakesoftware.com
512-422-6806
,
they're really pretty much equivalent in capability and expressiveness
to C and Java.
Turing complete functional languages are as expressive as an imperative
language. The
issue is not expressive power but it is an issue of fit of use to the
particular domain.
Agustin Gonzalez, Ph.D.
Director
any
legal problems (I don't think so because it is public domain).
---
Agustin Gonzalez, Principal
Town Lake Software
www.townlakesoftware.com
(512) 248-9839
On Friday, February 01, 2002 8:44 AM, James Patterson
[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
I can tell you that it is a waste of time trying
it mainly because the complicated licensing policies. I
think we would have definitely used it if it had been open source. Where
this had been the case, maybe by this time they may have been an open source
connector from Jess to EJB.
My .2 cents on the Jess open source discussion.
--
Agustin
to create a "temporary" fact to be able to fire
the rule.
I guess what bothers you, and that's a very good point, is that in RETE
intensional facts (i.e. those that only appear in heads of rules)
remain after they are asserted and not removed from the RETE net.
--
Agustin Gonzalez
Sta
A correction:
An intensional fact are those facts that appear in heads of rules (but they
may
also appear in bodies).
-Original Message-
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Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2000 10:39 AM
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