Jess (programming language)
Developer(s) | Sandia National Laboratories |
---|---|
Platform | Java |
License | Closed source / Public Domain |
Website | www.jessrules.com |
Jess is a rule engine for the Java platform that was developed by Ernest Friedman-Hill of Sandia National Labs.[1] It is a superset of the CLIPS programming language.[1] It was first written in late 1995.[1] The language provides rule-based programming for the automation of an expert system, and is frequently termed as an expert system shell.[1] In recent years, intelligent agent systems have also developed, which depend on a similar capability.
Rather than a procedural paradigm, where a single program has a loop that is activated only one time, the declarative paradigm used by Jess continuously applies a collection of rules to a collection of facts by a process called pattern matching. Rules can modify the collection of facts, or they can execute any Java code.
The Jess rules engine utilizes the Rete algorithm,[1] and can be utilized to create:
License
While CLIPS is licensed as open source, Jess is not open source. JESS is free for educational and government use but a license is required to use JESS for commercial systems.
Code examples
Code examples:
; is a comment
(bind ?x 100)
; x = 100
(deffunction max (?a ?b)
(if (> ?a ?b) then ?a else ?b))
(deffacts myroom
(furniture chair)
(furniture table)
(furniture bed)
)
(deftemplate car
(slot color)
(slot mileage)
(slot value)
)
(assert (car (color red) (mileage 10000) (value 400)))
Sample code:
(clear)
(deftemplate blood-donor (slot name) (slot type))
(deffacts blood-bank ; put names & their types into [[working memory]]
(blood-donor (name "Alice")(type "A"))
(blood-donor (name "Agatha")(type "A"))
(blood-donor (name "Bob")(type "B"))
(blood-donor (name "Barbara")(type "B"))
(blood-donor (name "Jess")(type "AB"))
(blood-donor (name "Karen")(type "AB"))
(blood-donor (name "Onan")(type "O"))
(blood-donor (name "Osbert")(type "O"))
)
(defrule can-give-to-same-type-but-not-self ; handles A > A, B > B, O > O, AB > AB, but not N1 > N1
(blood-donor (name ?name)(type ?type))
(blood-donor (name ?name2)(type ?type2 &:(eq ?type ?type2) &: (neq ?name ?name2) ))
=>
(printout t ?name " can give blood to " ?name2 crlf)
)
(defrule O-gives-to-others-but-not-itself ; O to O cover in above rule
(blood-donor (name ?name)(type ?type &:(eq ?type "O")))
(blood-donor (name ?name2)(type ?type2 &: (neq ?type ?type2) &: (neq ?name ?name2) ))
=>
(printout t ?name " can give blood to " ?name2 crlf)
)
(defrule A-or-B-gives-to-AB ; case O gives to AB and AB gives to AB already dealt with
(blood-donor (name ?name)(type ?type &:(or (eq ?type "A") (eq ?type "B" ))))
(blood-donor (name ?name2)(type ?type2 &: (eq ?type2 "AB") &: (neq ?name ?name2) ))
=>
(printout t ?name " can give blood to " ?name2 crlf)
)
;(watch all)
(reset)
(run)
See also
Related systems
- CLIPS: public domain software tool for building expert systems.
- ILOG rules: a business rule management system.
- JBoss Drools: a business rule management system (BRMS).
- Prolog: a general purpose logic programming language.
- OpenL Tablets: business centric rules and BRMS.
- DTRules: a decision table based, open-sourced rule engine for Java.
References
Additional sources
- Friedman-Hill, Ernest (2003). Jess in Action: Rule Based Systems in Java. Manning Publications. Retrieved March 30, 2012. ISBN 1-930110-89-8