Embedding Guvnor just means that you hide the top-level interface, and embed the guided
editor into your web app. So if you're not fond of the guided editor, then embedding
doesn't solve the problem.
How far did you get into DSLs? When used within the guided editor, you get a list of DSL
phrases to choose from, and having picked one, users can just drop values into the slots
you make available in the templates, and you can provide enums to populate drop-down
lists. It's fairly close to what you're after.
Generally with Guvnor, you do need a team of users who are pretty open to the rather
over-technical guided editor UI that it offers, with all its Java-influenced package
structures. The competition such as FICO Blaze and IBM/ILOG JRules do a better job here,
*if* you're prepared to spend the money and spend the time learning your way around
their IDEs for designing templates.
If you're up for spending the time on it, you can build your own UI to generate DRL,
and use the Guvnor REST interface to upload the rules. That way, you can potentially get
whatever UI you like, but it's a lot of work.
Depending on your taste for adventure, another option would be to check out the version 6
betas. The new workbench supposedly provides much more in the way of customisation
options. Check out Mark Proctor's presentation here, for some of what it offers:
Steve
On 11 Aug 2013, at 21:09, Mark Bennett <mark.bennett(a)lucidworks.com> wrote:
Thanks Steve.
I'll check out dozer.
I did look at DSL's, but the emphasis is really on putting a UI on things.
Your advice on hold off baking in every single field also mirrors a point that was raised
on the team recently. Advanced users can always drop into DRL mode, etc.
Actually, Guvnor's guided rules isn't our ideal UI either. I think we were
hoping for more of a "wizard" toolkit where users select from a list of
pre-existing rules and fill in templates, at least as an option for new users. Then more
advanced users could jump out to the guided rules or even the expert / DRL rules mode.
But Guvnor's guided rules are still a pretty advanced UI for newcomers. It's kind
of funny, I think people assume that anything that has a "UI" is easy/obvious to
use, even for new users; I'm pretty sure we could all rattle off many counter-examples
from the software world. ;-)
Any thoughts on conjuring a simpler UI for truly "guided" rules creation? I
read that Guvnor could be embedded, but not sure that really helps either.
--
Mark Bennett / LucidWorks: Search & Big Data / mark.bennett(a)lucidworks.com
Office: 408-898-4201 / Telecommute: 408-733-0387 / Cell: 408-829-6513
On Aug 10, 2013, at 2:14 AM, Stephen Masters <stephen.masters(a)me.com>
wrote:
> Your plan seems about right to me. When working in pure Drools, you don't always
need to do this. However, when working in Guvnor, I have always found it necessary to
create a simplified domain model for facts.
>
> In Guvnor, you can bind variables to fields and drill in, but it's fiddly. Guided
rules are much more readable when they are dealing with matching bean-style facts with key
attributes available through simple getX() accessor methods. And of course you definitely
need the bean-style getX() methods.
>
> The other thing to think about, is that when working with Guvnor, you should be
avoiding any dependencies on external classes from within your facts. Otherwise, you will
need to put everything on your Guvnor web server's class path, which totally messes
with your ability to upload fact model updates. Yet another reason to keep them simple.
>
>
> So given that you're going with that plan, here are my tips for the lazy (like
me)...
>
> To help with simplifying your transformations, it may be worth looking at Dozer or
similar:
http://dozer.sourceforge.net/
>
> Personally, because I have often found that I'm doing things like mapping
multiple objects into a single fact, I tend to just do the mapping in straight Java code.
It tends not to be too painful, as I rarely find the need for bi-directional mappings. I
don't often need to get a fact back out of working memory. So although it feels a bit
naughty, I often avoid the fact-to-domain-object transform. :)
>
> Think about what properties you really might want to write rules about. It's easy
to spend a huge amount of time writing a huge fact model, and transforms for every single
property of every class in your domain model. Truth is you probably won't write rules
that look at all of it. So have a think about whether you do need to map everything or
not. My tip here would be to follow a TDD approach. Look at what rules your users want to
write. You should find that the rules mostly follow certain stereotypes, so create rule
tests covering a representative selection of such stereotype (ensure coverage of all
unique fact attributes which are examined). Create a fact model which can satisfy those
tests. Create tests for transforming from your domain model to your fact model. Create
transforms to that fact model. Assuming you have a reasonably iterative environment, you
can add transforms for additional attributes when users have tried out the application and
come up with new rule stereotypes they would like to work with.
>
>
> As an alternative (or to complement the above), take a look at DSLs. Each DSL phrase
becomes available in your guided editor, so you can have simple rule phrases which the
users can understand, but underneath, you can have code which is drilling into nested
objects.
>
> I do hope that's helpful… :)
>
> Steve
>
>
>
> On 10 Aug 2013, at 00:47, Mark Bennett <mark.bennett(a)lucidworks.com> wrote:
>
>> We want our domain experts to be able to create Guided Rules in Guvnor (5.5)
>>
>> But Guvnor seems pretty limited about what it will accept, and how it will render
it.
>>
>> We're attempting to create adapter classes that will:
>> * Allow us to expose a rich set of fields and methods in UI
>> * Use as injected facts into the engine
>>
>> Main issues we're having:
>> * Native objects are nested, but Guvnor seems to want shallow
>> * Our native objects can have different attributes (different schemas)
>> - And you can't say getField( fieldName )
>> * Some returned items can be multivalued, vs. singular
>>
>> Our idea is:
>> * Have admin send a prototypical request & schema event into our native
system
>> * Scrape and flatten that into a java class that exposes Guvnor friendly methods
>> * Send that class into Guvnor
>> * Keep a copy of that class to create instances of when injecting facts into the
engine
>>
>> Is there some type of easy way to map complex objects to/from the simpler
Guvnor/Drools model? Some type of reflection based mapper with some simple rules or a
template? We're wondering what others have done in this situation?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Mark
>>
>> --
>> Mark Bennett / LucidWorks: Search & Big Data / mark.bennett(a)lucidworks.com
>> Office: 408-898-4201 / Telecommute: 408-733-0387 / Cell: 408-829-6513
>>
>>
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>>
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