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pl:miw:2009:present:alsvfd [2009/05/19 19:58]
jsi08
pl:miw:2009:present:alsvfd [2019/06/27 15:50] (aktualna)
Linia 74: Linia 74:
  
 ===== Semantics ===== ===== Semantics =====
-In SAL the semantics of A_i=d is straightforward -- the attribute takes a single value. ​+  * In SAL the semantics of A_i=d is straightforward -- the attribute takes a single value.  
 +  * The semantics of A_i=t is that the attribute takes //all// the values of //t// (the so-called //internal conjunction//​) while the semantics of A_i \in t is that it takes //one// (in case of simple attributes) or //some// (in case of generalized attributes) of the values of //t// (the so-called //internal disjunction//​). 
 +  * As an example for the necessity of SAL one can consider the specification of working days (denoted with //WDay//) given as //WDay = D//, where D is the set of working days, D = { Monday,​Tuesday,​Wednesday,​Thursday,​Friday }. Now one can construct an atomic formula like CurrentDay \in  D, or a rule of the form: DayOfInterest \in  D -> Status(OfficeOfInterest) = open.
  
-The semantics of A_i=t is that the attribute takes //all// the values of //t// (the so-called //internal conjunction//​) while the semantics of  +===== Semantics =====
-A_i \in t  +
-is that it takes //one// (in case of simple attributes) or //some// (in case of generalized attributes) of the values of //t// (the so-called //internal disjunction//​).+
  
-As an example for the necessity ​of SAL one can consider ​the specification of working days (denoted ​with //WDay//) given as +  * The semantics of <​latex>​$A = V$</​latex>​ is basically ​the same as the one of basic SAL
-//WDay = D//, +  * If <​latex>​$V = \{d_{1}, d_{2},​\ldots,​ d_{k}  \}$</​latex>​ then <​latex>​$A = V$</​latex>​ is equivalent to <​latex>​ $A \supseteq \{d_{1}\}\wedge A \supseteq \{d_{2}\}\wedge\ldots\wedge A \supseteq \{d_{k}\}$ </​latex>​ i.e. the attribute takes all the values specified ​with <​latex>​$V$<​/latex> (and nothing more). 
-where D is the set of working days{ Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,​Thursday,​Friday }. +  * The semantics of <​latex>​$A\subseteq V$</latex>, <​latex>​$A \supseteq V$</latex> and <​latex>​$A \sim V$</latex> is defined ​as follows: ​ 
-Now one can construct an atomic formula like CurrentDay \in  D, or a rule of the form: +    * <​latex>​ $A\subseteq V \equiv A=U$ </latex> where //U subset V//, i.e. //A// takes //some// of the values from //V// (and nothing out of //V//), 
-DayOfInterest ​\in  D -Status(OfficeOfInterest= open.+    * <​latex>​ A\supseteq V \equiv A=W</​latex>​ where //V subset W//i.e. //A// takes //​all// ​of the values from //V// (and perhaps some more), 
 +    * <​latex>​ A\sim V \equiv A= X, </latexwhere <​latex>​ $V \cap X \neq \emptyset$, </​latex>​ i.e. //A// takes //some// of the values from //V// (and perhaps some more)
 +  * As it can be seen, the semantics of ALSV is defined by means of relaxation of logic to simple set algebra.
  
 +===== Inference Rules =====
  
-The semantics of $A = V$ is basically the same as the one of basic SAL. +  * Let //V// and //W// be two sets of values such that //V subset W//We have the following straightforward inference rules for atomic formulae: <​latex> ​$\frac{A \supseteq W}{\supseteq V}$ </latex> ​i.e. if an attribute takes all the values of a certain set it must take all the values of any subset of it (downward consistency). 
-If $V = \{d_{1}, d_{2},\ldots, d_{k}  ​\}$ then $A = V$ is equivalent to +  * Similarly <​latex> ​$\frac{\subseteq V}{A \subseteq W}\end{equation} </​latex>​ i.e. if the values of an attribute takes values ​located within ​ a certain set they must also belong to any superset of it (upward consistency).  
-<​latex>​ +  * These rules seem a bit trivial, but they must be implemented for enabling inference, e.g they are used in the rule precondition checking.
-$A \supseteq ​\{d_{1}\}\wedge ​A \supseteq \{d_{2}\}\wedge\ldots\wedge A \supseteq \{d_{k}\}+
-</​latex>​ +
-i.e. the attribute takes all the values ​specified with $V$ (and nothing more).+
  
-The semantics of $A\subseteq V$, $A \supseteq V$ and $A \sim V$ is defined as follows:+===== Inference Rules =====
  
-<​latex>​ +{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table3.png|}}
-$A\subseteq V \equiv A=U$ +
-</​latex>​ +
-where  +
-//U subset V//, +
-i.e. //A// takes //some// of the values from //V// (and nothing out of //V//),+
  
-<​latex>​ +  * The table is to be read as follows: if an atomic formula in the leftmost column holds, and a condition stated in the same row is truethe to appropriate atomic formula in the topmost row is a logical consequence ​of the one from the leftmost column.
-A\supseteq V \equiv A=W, +
-</​latex>​ +
-where  +
-//V subset W//, +
-i.e. //A// takes //all// of the values from //V// (and perhaps some more), and  +
- +
-<​latex>​ +
-A\sim V \equiv A= X, +
-</​latex>​ +
-where  +
-<​latex>​ +
-$V \cap X \neq \emptyset$,​ +
-</​latex>​ +
-i.e. //A// takes //​some// ​of the values ​from //V// (and perhaps some more).  +
- +
-As it can be seen, the semantics of ALSV is defined by means of relaxation of logic to simple set algebra.+
  
 ===== Inference Rules ===== ===== Inference Rules =====
  
-Let //V// and //W// be two sets of values such that //V subset W//. We have the following straightforward inference rules for atomic formulae: +{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table4.png|}}
-<​latex>​ +
-$\frac{A \supseteq W}{A \supseteq V}+
-</​latex>​ +
-i.e. if an attribute takes all the values of a certain set it must take all the values of any subset of it (downward consistency). ​+
  
-Similarly +FIXME  
-<​latex>​ +(The rules must be checked; simple rules are for matching preconditions to the state formulaMore complex rules can be for establishing truth-value propagation among atoms of preconditions ​within a table). 
-$\frac{A \subseteq V}{A \subseteq W}$ +8-O 8-O 8-O
-\end{equation} +
-</​latex>​ +
-i.e. if the values ​of an attribute takes values located ​within ​ certain set they must also belong to any superset of it (upward consistency). +
  
-These rules seem a bit trivial, but they must be implemented for enabling inference, e.g they are used in the rule precondition checking.+===== Inference Rules =====
  
-The summary ​of the inference rules for atomic formulae with simple attributes ​(where an atomic formula is the logical consequence ​of another atomic formulais presented in Table 3.  +  * In Tables 3 and 4 the conditions are //​satisfactory//​ ones.  
-The table is to be read as follows: if an atomic formula in the leftmost column ​holds, and a condition stated ​in the same row is true, the to appropriate ​atomic formula in the topmost row is a logical consequence of the one from the leftmost ​column. ​+  * It is important to note that in case of the first rows of the tables ​(the cases of A=d_i and A=V, respectivelyall the conditions are also //​necessary//​ ones
 +  ​* ​The interpretation of the tables ​is straightforward: if an atomic formula in the leftmost column in some row //i// is true, then the atomic formula in the topmost row in some column //j// is also true, provided that the relation indicated on intersection of row //i// and column ​//j// is true.  
 +  * The rules of Table 3 and Table 4 can be used for checking if preconditions of a formula hold or verifying subsumption among rules.
  
-<​latex>​ +===== Inference Rules =====
-\begin{table} +
-\caption{Inference rules for atomic formulae for simple attributes} +
-\begin{center} +
-%\begin{tabular}{|c||c|c|c|c|} +
-{\small +
-\begin{tabular}{|p{10mm}||p{13mm}|p{14mm}|p{13mm}|p{15mm}|} +
-\hline +
-$\models$ ​        & $A=d_{j}$ ​       & $A\neq d_{j}$ ​   & $A \in V_{j}$ ​  & $A \not\in V_{j}$ ​        \\ +
-\hline\hline +
-$A=d_{i}$ ​        & $d_{i} ​d_{j}$ ​ & $d_{i}\neq d_{j}$ & $d_{i}\in V_{j}$ & $d_{i}\not\in V_{j}$ ​    \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \neq d_{i}$ ​   & \_               & $d_{i} ​d_{j}$ ​ & $V_{j} ​D\setminus \{d_{i}\}$ &  $V_{j} = \{d_{i} \}$       \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \in V_{i}$ ​    & $V_{i} ​\{d_{j} \}$ &  $d_{j}\not\in V_{i}$ ​ &  $V_{i}\subseteq V_{j}$ & $V_{i}\cap V_{j} \emptyset$ ​         \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \not\in V_{i}$ & $D\setminus V_{i} \{d_{j}\}$ &  $V_{i} ​\{d_{j}\}$ & $V_{j}=D\setminus V_{i}$ &  $V_{j}\subseteq V_{i}$ ​        \\ +
-\hline +
-\end{tabular} +
-+
-\end{center} +
-\label{table1} +
-\end{table} +
-</​latex>​+
  
-{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table3.png|}}+{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table5.png|}}
  
-Table 3Inference rules for atomic formulae for simple attributes+  * The interpretation of the Table 5 is straightforwardif the condition specified at the intersection of some row and column holds, then the atomic formulae ​labelling this row and column cannot simultaneously hold. Note however, that this is a satisfactory condition only. 
 +  * The Table can be used for analysis of determinism of the system, i.e. whether satisfaction of precondition of a rule implies that the other rules in the same table cannot be fired. ​
  
-The summary of the inference rules for atomic formulae with generalized attributes (where an atomic formula is the logical consequence of another atomic formula) is presented in Table 4.+===== State, State Representation and Inference =====
  
-<​latex>​ +  ​When processing information,​ the current values of attributes ​form the state of the inference process. 
-\begin{table*+  ​* The values of attributes can, in general, ​ be modified in the following three ways: 
-\caption{Inference rules for atomic formulae for generalized ​attributes} +    ​- by an independent,​ external system, 
-\begin{center} +    ​- by the inference process, and 
-\begin{tabular}{|c||c|c|c|c|c|c|} +    - as some clock-dependent functions.
-\hline +
-$\models$ ​      & $A=W$  & $A\neq W$   & $A\subseteq W$  & $A \supseteq W$ & $A \sim W$ & $A \not\sim W$   \\ +
-\hline\hline +
-$A=V$           & $V=W$  & $V\neq W$   & $V\subseteq W$  & $V\supseteq W$  & $V\cap W\neq \emptyset$ & $V\cap W = \emptyset$ ​   \\ +
-\hline +
-$A\neq V$       & \_     & ​ $V=W$      & $W = D$         & ​ \_             & $W = D$    &  \_                \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \subseteq V$ & \_     & $V \subset W$ & $V\subseteq W$ &  \_             & $W = D$    &  $V\cap W = \emptyset$ ​ \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \supseteq V$ &  \_    &  $W \subset V$   & ​ $W = D$        &   ​$V\supseteq W$ & $V\cap W \neq \emptyset$ &  \_      \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \sim V$     & \_ & $V\cap W=\emptyset$ &  $W = D$ &  \_       & ​ $V=W$    &  \_                 \\ +
-\hline +
-$A\not\sim V$  &   ​\_ ​  & ​ $V\cap W\neq\emptyset$ &  $W = D$     & ​ \_       & ​ $W=D$     & $V=W$                  \\ +
-\hline +
-\end{tabular} +
-\end{center} +
-\label{table2} +
-\end{table*} +
-</​latex>​ +
-{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table4.png|}}+
  
-Table 4: Inference ​rules for atomic formulae for generalized attributes+===== State, State Representation and Inference ​=====
  
-FIXME  +  * The first case concerns attributes which represent some process variables, which are to be incorporated in the inference process, but depend only of the environment and external systems 
-(The rules must be checked; simple rules are for matching preconditions ​to the state formulaMore complex rules can be for establishing truth-value propagation among atoms of preconditions within ​table)+  * As such, the variables cannot ​be directly influenced by the XTT system.  
-8-O 8-O 8-O+  * Examples: external temperature,​ the age of a client or the set of foreign languages known by a candidate
 +  * Values of such variables are obtained as a result of some measurement or observation process. 
 +  * They are assumed to be put into the inference system via a //​blackboard//​ communication method; in fact they are written directly into the internal memory whenever their values are obtained or changed.
  
-In Tables 3 and 4 the conditions are //​satisfactory//​ ones.  +===== StateState Representation ​and Inference =====
-However, it is important to note that in case of the first rows of the tables  +
-(the cases of A=d_i and A=V, respectively) all the conditions are also //​necessary//​ ones. +
-The interpretation of the tables is straightforward:​ if an atomic formula in the leftmost column in some row //i// is truethen the atomic formula in the topmost row in some column //j// is also true, provided that the relation indicated on intersection of row //i// and column //j// is true.  +
-The rules of Table 3 and Table 4 can be used for checking if preconditions of a formula hold or verifying subsumption among rules.+
  
-For further analysis, e.g. of intersection (overlapping) ​of rule preconditions one may be interested if two atoms cannot simultaneously be true and if so --- under what conditions+  * The second case concerns the values ​of attributes obtained at certain stage of reasoning as the result of the operations performed in RHS of XTT.  
-For example formula  +  * The new values of the attributes can be: 
-<​latex>​ +    * asserted to global memory (and hence stored and made available ​for any components of the system), or 
-$A\subseteq V\wedge A\subseteq W$  +    * kept as values of internal process variables.
-</​latex>​ +
-is inconsistent if  +
-<​latex>​ +
-$V\cap W=\emptyset$. +
-</​latex>​ +
-Table 5 specifies ​the conditions ​for inconsistency.+
  
-<​latex>​ +===== State, State Representation and Inference =====
-\begin{table} +
-\caption{Inconsistency conditions for pairs of atomic formulae} +
-\begin{center} +
-{\small +
-\begin{tabular}{|c||c|c|c|c|} +
-\hline +
-$\not\models$ ​      & $A=W$            & $A\subseteq W$  & $A \supseteq W$ & $A \sim W$               \\ +
-\hline\hline +
-$A=V$           & $W\neq V$   & $V \not\subseteq W$ &  $W\not\subseteq V$  & $V\cap W \neq \emptyset$ \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \subseteq V$ & $W\not\subseteq V$            & $V\cap W \emptyset$ ​  & $W\not\subseteq V$ &    $W\cap V =\emptyset$ ​      \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \supseteq V$ & $V\not\subseteq W$   & ​ $V\not\subseteq W$          &  \_ & \_     \\ +
-\hline +
-$A \sim V$      &   ​$V\cap W \neq \emptyset$ ​         &   ​$W\not\subseteq V$            &  \_             & ​ \_    \\ +
-\hline +
-\end{tabular} +
-+
-\end{center} +
-\label{table21} +
-\end{table} +
-</​latex>​+
  
-{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table5.png|}}+  * The first solution is offered mostly for permanent changes; before asserting new values typically and appropriate retract operation is to be performed so as to keep a consistent state. In this way also the history (trajectory) of the system can be stored, provided that each value of an attribute is stored with a temporal index. 
 +  * The second solution is offered for value passing and  calculations which do not require permanent storage. For example, if a calculated value is to be passed to some next XTT component and it is no longer used after, it is not necessary to store it in the global memory.
  
-Table 5: Inconsistency conditions for pairs of atomic formulae+===== The State of the System =====
  
-The interpretation ​of the Table 5 is straightforward:​ if the condition specified ​at the intersection ​of some row and column holds, then the atomic formulae labelling this row and column cannot simultaneously holdNote howeverthat this is a satisfactory condition only.+  * The current state of the system ​is considered as a complete set of values of all the attributes in use at a certain instant ​of time.  
 +  * The concept of the state is similar to the one in dynamic systems ​and state-machines. 
 +  * The representation of the state should satisfy the following requirements:​ 
 +    -  the specification is //​internally consistent//​, 
 +    -  the specification ​is //​externally consistent//,​ 
 +    -  the specification is //​complete//,​ 
 +    -  the specification is //​deterministic//,​ 
 +    -  the specification is //concise//.
  
-The Table can be used for analysis ​of determinism of the system, i.e. whether satisfaction of precondition of a rule implies that the other rules in the same table cannot be fired. ​+===== The State of the System =====
  
 +  * The first postulate says that the specification itself cannot be inconsistent at the syntactic level. For example, a simple attribute (one taking a single value) cannot take two different values at the same time. In general, assuming independence of the attributes and no use of explicit negation, each value of an attribute should be specified once.
 +  * The second postulate says, that only //true// knowledge (with respect to the external system) can be specified in state. In other words, facts that are syntactically correct but false cannot occur in the state formula.
  
 +===== The State of the System =====
  
-===== ALSV(FD) and StateState Representation ​and Inference =====+  * The third postulate says, that //all// the knowledge true at a certain instant of time should be represented within the state. 
 +  * The four postulate says that there can be no disjunctive knowledge specification within the state. 
 +  * Finally, the fifth postulate says that no unnecessarydependent knowledge should be kept in the state. In databases ​and most of the knowledge bases this has a practical dimension: only true facts are represented explicitly.
  
 +===== The State of the System =====
  
-When processing information,​ the current values of attributes ​form the state of the inference process. The values of attributes can, in general, ​ be modified in the following three ways: +  * The current values of all the attributes ​are specified with the contents ​of the knowledge-base (including current sensor readingsmeasurementsinputs examinationetc.). 
-  ​by an independentexternal system, +  ​* From logical point of view it is formula ​of the form:<​latex>​ 
-  - by the inference processand +$(A_{1}=S_{1})\wedge(A_{2}=S_{2})\wedge \ldots \wedge (A_{n}=S_{n})$ 
-  ​- as some clock-dependent functions. +</latex> where <​latex>​$S_{i} = d_{i}$</latex> (<​latex>​$d_{i}\in D_{i}$</latex>) for simple attributes and <​latex>​$S_{i}= V_{i}$</latex>, (<​latex>​$V_{i}\subseteq D_{i}$</​latex>​) for complex
-The first case concerns attributes which represent some process variables, which are to be incorporated in the inference process, but depend only of the environment and external systems. As such, the variables cannot be directly influenced by the XTT system. Examples of such variables may be the external temperature,​ the age of a client or the set of foreign languages known by a candidate. Values of such variables are obtained as a result of some measurement or observation process. They are assumed to be put into the inference system via a //blackboard// communication method; in fact they are written directly into the internal memory whenever their values are obtained or changed.+
  
-The second case concerns the values ​of attributes obtained at certain stage of reasoning as the result of the operations performed in RHS of XTT. The new values of the attributes can be: +===== The State of the System =====
-  * asserted to global memory (and hence stored and made available for any components of the system), or +
-  * kept as values of internal process variables. +
-The first solution is offered mostly for permanent changes; before asserting new values typically and appropriate retract operation is to be performed so as to keep a consistent state. In this way also the history (trajectory) of the system can be stored, provided that each value of an attribute is stored with a temporal index. +
-The second solution is offered for value passing and  calculations which do not require permanent storage. For example, if a calculated value is to be passed to some next XTT component and it is no longer used after, it is not necessary to store it in the global memory.+
  
-==== The State of the System ====+  * In order to cover realistic cases some explicit notation for covering unspecified,​ unknown values is proposed; this is so to deal with the data containing the NULL values imported from a database. 
 +  * The first case refers to unspecified value of an attribute as a consequence of inappropriateness. A formula ​of the form <​latex>​$A=\bot$</​latex>​ means that the attribute <​latex>​$A$</​latex>​ takes an empty set of values (no value at all) at the current instant of time (or forever) for the object under consideration. 
 +  * For example, the attribute ''​Maiden_Name''​ or ''​The_Year_of_Last_Pregnancy''​ for a man is not applicable and hence it takes no value for all men.
  
-The current state of the system is considered as a complete set of values of all the attributes in use at a certain instant of time. The concept of the state is similar to the one in dynamic systems and state-machines. The representation of the state should satisfy the following requirements:​ +===== The State of the System =====
-  -  the specification is //​internally consistent//,​ +
-  -  the specification is //​externally consistent//,​ +
-  -  the specification is //​complete//,​ +
-  -  the specification is //​deterministic//,​ +
-  -  the specification is //​concise//​. +
-The first postulate says that the specification itself cannot be inconsistent at the syntactic level. For example, a simple attribute (one taking a single value) cannot take two different values at the same time. In general, assuming independence of the attributes and no use of explicit negation, each value of an attribute should be specified once. +
-The second postulate says, that only //true// knowledge (with respect to the external system) can be specified in state. In other words, facts that are syntactically correct but false cannot occur in the state formula. +
-The third postulate says, that //all// the knowledge true at a certain instant of time should be represented within the state. +
-The four postulate says that there can be no disjunctive knowledge specification within the state. +
-Finally, the fifth postulate says that no unnecessary,​ dependent knowledge should be kept in the state. In databases and most of the knowledge bases this has a practical dimension: only true facts are represented explicitly.+
  
-The current values of all the attributes are specified with the contents of the knowledge-base (including current sensor readings, measurements,​ inputs examination,​ etc.)From logical point of view it is a formula of the form+  * The second case refers to a situation that the attribute may be applied to an object, but it takes no value. This will be denoted as <​latex>​A=\emptyset</​latex>​. 
-<​latex>​ +  * For example, ​the formula ''​Phone_Number''​=//​\emptyset//​ means that the considered person has no phone number. 
-$(A_{1}=S_{1})\wedge(A_{2}=S_{2})\wedge \ldots \wedge (A_{n}=S_{n})$ +  * The third case is for covering the ''​NULL''​ values present in relational databasesformula of the form <​latex>​A=\mathtt{NULL}</​latex> ​means that attribute <​latex>​$A$</​latex>​ takes an unspecified value.
-</​latex>​ +
-where $S_{i} = d_{i}($d_{i}\in D_{i}$) for simple attributes and $S_{i}= V_{i}$, ($V_{i}\subseteq D_{i}$) for complex+
  
-In order to cover realistic cases some explicit notation for covering unspecified,​ unknown values is proposed; this is so to deal with the data containing the NULL values imported from a database. 
-The first case refers to unspecified value of an attribute as a consequence of inappropriateness. A formula of the form  
-$A=\bot$ ​ 
-means that the attribute $A$ takes an empty set of values (no value at all) at the current instant of time (or forever) for the object under consideration. For example, the attribute ''​Maiden_Name''​ or ''​The_Year_of_Last_Pregnancy''​ for a man is not applicable and hence it takes no value for all men. 
-%% 
-The second case refers to a situation that the attribute may be applied to an object, but it takes no value. This will be denoted as //​A=\emptyset//​. ​ 
-For example, the formula ''​Phone_Number''​=//​\emptyset//​ means that the considered person has no phone number. 
-%% 
-The third case is for covering the ''​NULL''​ values present in relational databases. A formula of the form  
-//​A=\mathtt{NULL}//​ 
-means that attribute $A$ takes an unspecified value. 
  
 +===== State and rule firing =====
  
-==== State and rule firing ====+  * In order to fire a rule all the precondition facts defining its LHS must be true within the current state. 
 +  * The verification procedure consists in matching these fact against the state specification. 
 +  * A separate procedure concerns simple (single-valued) attributes, and a separate one is applied in case of complex attributes.
  
-In order to fire a rule all the precondition facts defining its LHS must be true within the current state. The verification procedure consists in matching these fact against the state specification. A separate procedure concerns simple (single-valued) attributes, and a separate one is applied in case of complex attributes. +===== State and rule firing ​===== 
-The following tables provide a formal background for preconditions matching ​and rule-firing ​procedure: +{{:hekate:​salrules-flairs-table6.png|}}
-Tab.~6  +
-defines when a precondition of the form //A\propto d// is satisfied with respect to given state, +
-and +
-Tab.~7  +
-defines the principles for matching precondition defined with set-valued attributes against the state formula.+
  
- +===== State and rule firing ​=====
-{{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table6.png|}} +
-Table 6: Inference principles for firing ​rules, case of single-valued attributes.+
  
 {{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table7.png|}} {{:​hekate:​salrules-flairs-table7.png|}}
- 
-Table 7: Inference principles for firing rules, case of general attributes. 
  
 ===== ALSV Rules ===== ===== ALSV Rules =====
  
 +  * ALSV(FD) has been introduced with practical applications for rule languages in mind.
 +  * In fact, the primary aim of the presented language is to extend the notational possibilities and expressive power of the XTT-based tabular rule-based systems.
 +  * An important extension consist in allowing for explicit specification of one of the symbols eq, neq, in, notin, subset, supset, sim, notsim, with an argument in the table.
  
-ALSV(FD) has been introduced with practical applications for rule languages ​ in mind.  +===== Rule Format ​=====
-In fact, the primary aim of the presented language is to extend the notational possibilities and expressive power of the XTT-based tabular rule-based systems. +
-An important extension consist in allowing for explicit specification of one of the symbols  +
-eq, +
-neq, +
-in,  +
-notin,  +
-subset, +
-supset, +
-sim, +
-notsim,  +
-with an argument in the table. +
- +
-==== Rule Format ====+
  
 Consider a set of //n// attributes ​ Consider a set of //n// attributes ​
Linia 350: Linia 223:
 and RHS is the right-hand side of the rule covering conclusion and perhaps the retract and assert definitions if necessary. and RHS is the right-hand side of the rule covering conclusion and perhaps the retract and assert definitions if necessary.
  
-==== Rule Firing ====+===== Rule Firing ​=====
 The current values of all the attributes are specified with the contents of the knowledge-base (including current sensor readings, measurements,​ inputs examination,​ etc.). ​ The current values of all the attributes are specified with the contents of the knowledge-base (including current sensor readings, measurements,​ inputs examination,​ etc.). ​
  
Linia 368: Linia 241:
 for complex. for complex.
  
-==== ANY and NULL ==== +===== ANY and NULL ===== 
-In case the value of A_i is unspecified we shall write A_i = NULL (a database convention).  +  ​* ​In case the value of A_i is unspecified we shall write A_i = NULL (a database convention).  
- +  ​* ​Following a Prolog convention and logic, a //ANY// attribute value is possible in comparison (see''​_''​ in Prolog). 
-Following a Prolog convention and logic, a //ANY// attribute value is possible in comparison (see''​_''​ in Prolog). +  ​* ​The semantics can be: "any value",​ "not important",​ etc. 
- +  ​* ​The solution: 
-The semantics can be: "any value",​ "not important",​ etc. +    * in preconditions,​ we can only use //ANY//, i.e. an atom such as ''​A=_''​ can be specified, meaning "any value",​ "all possible values of the attribute",​ "we don't care"​ 
- +    * on the other hand, attribute A unspecified,​ in the state formula means ''​A=NULL'',​ so we store NULL in state 
-The solution: +    * here we come to an inference rule: ''​A=NULL''​ ==> ''​A=_''​. Seems to be valid... This rules should be optionally disabled/​enabled in the inference engine.
-  * in preconditions,​ we can only use //ANY//, i.e. an atom such as ''​A=_''​ can be specified, meaning "any value",​ "all possible values of the attribute",​ "we don't care"​ +
-  * on the other hand, attribute A unspecified,​ in the state formula means ''​A=NULL'',​ so we store NULL in state +
-  * here we come to an inference rule: ''​A=NULL''​ ==> ''​A=_''​. Seems to be valid... This rules should be optionally disabled/​enabled in the inference engine+
- +
-FIXME It seems, we could have three types of NULL-like values: Not-applicable,​ Potentially-applicable but taking no value empty/​no-defined,​ Applicabe-and-takin-value but unknown.+
  
pl/miw/2009/present/alsvfd.1242755921.txt.gz · ostatnio zmienione: 2019/06/27 15:57 (edycja zewnętrzna)
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