Hi
All,
Can anybody tell as to wat
does the assert() method do in a DRL file, like the way it is used in the below
example. I am aware of assertObject() method but not assert() method.
Thank
you,
Mithun
Krishnan,
I always
prefer to use specific tools for specific jobs. So, if I were implementing
that, I would not put the I/O code inside the DRL.
If you want
your rules to drive the parsing, I would model it like that:
1) Create
a class to "represent" your file... that would be your File interface. It
would have a method: readLine() that returns a Line object, as well as an
"eof" property (true when EOF was reached).
2) Create a rule to drive
your parsing:
rule "R1: Read one more line"
when
$f : File( eof == false
)
then
System.out.println("Generate new
line");
assert( $f.readLine() );
modify( $f ); // as readLine
"modifies" the state of the File
end
3) Create the rules to
effectivelly "analyze" your lines. If you want to read all lines first and
then analyze them, just make rule R1 to have a greater salience. Otherwise, if
you want each line analyzed as it is parsed, make your other rules have a
greater salience as showed bellow:
rule "Rx: analyze
line"
salience 10
when
Line( content
matches "xxx" )
then
// do
something
end
4. Create the rule to close your file when EOF is
reached:
rule "close file'
when
$f: File( eof
== true )
then
$f.closeFile();
end
Keeping the procedural code in your
java classes instead of DRL functions makes all your rules more clear, makes
easy to unit test each part, and reduces the overall complexity.
That is how I would do it.
Hope it
helps.
Edson
2007/5/17, Krishnan <krishiyer@gmail.com>:
Hi,
I want to parse a file and match the file for
several regular expressions. Based on what I match, I write more
rules
so that based on all the rules, I can set my results.
Brute force
method : Parse the entire file and add all the lines into the working
memory. Write rules that
check each line for some regular expression.
This works great.
I want to optimize the above, as we are checking
each line, if we got we are looking for, then I want to get out.
So, I wrote a function inside the rule file like the below
function String getLine(BufferedReader fileReader)
{
String line;
try
{
if ((line =
fileReader.readLine()) != null) {
return
line.toLowerCase();
} else
{
System.out.println("This is an empty
line.");
}
} catch (Exception ex) {
}
return line;
}
Now,
I need to write the rules that will use this.
rule "Generate New
Line"
when
eval (getLine(fileReader) != null)
then
System.out.println("Generate
new line");
//assert(getLine(fileReader)); // need to somehow assert the line specified
in the eval condition
end
Also, I am confused, how to specify
file end.
rule "File End"
when
eval (getLine(fileReader) ==
null)
then
System.out.println("Reached end of file"); // I am assuming this is not
needed since if all rules are executed, then it will get out of fireRules()
anyways ?
end
Any help is appreciated.
TIA,
Krishnan
(newbie)
-
Sivaramakrishna Iyer Krishnan (Anand)
Never assume the obvious is true.
- William Safire
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