As One is a field of Two. When you change One you are also changing Two,
so you most notify the engine for Two too.
MArk
On 22/06/2011 14:37, Wolfgang Laun wrote:
To avoid misunderstandings: yes, equals() is written according to
hashCode, i.e., according to the usual Java conventions.
If
- an object of class Two contains a member of class One, and
- one object Two and one object One are facts, and
- a rule modifies One, changing its hashCode
then
another rule containing the patterns
$one: One()
$two: Two( $x: one == $one )
does NOT fire (any more).
If you use the constraint
one == $one || != $one
the rule will fire, and you can observe that hashCode results for $one
and $x are the same and that $one.equals( $x ) returns true.
Reproduced using 5.1.1 and 5.2.x
-W
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