The answer to whether this is a good approach is, "It depends." :)
Does the 10^4 and 10^5 figure mean there could be that many rules? If so, definitely do
the data driven approach.
If not, will business folk (i.e. non technical) will be writing pricing rules? If so, do
the rules based approach as data driven rules are generally less understandable by
business types. (They're a bit more abstract and influenced by the structure of your
data model. Business people should not have to deal with either abstraction or the
implementation details of a data model.)
There's no reason why you can't do both, though.
--- On Wed, 4/7/10, Bertrand Grottier <b_grottier(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
From: Bertrand Grottier <b_grottier(a)hotmail.com>
Subject: [rules-users] Facts or rules ?
To: rules-users(a)lists.jboss.org
Date: Wednesday, April 7, 2010, 9:23 AM
Hello,
I am a newbie with business rules systems.
I would like to implement a component that "compute" the price of products.
There can be a great number of potential prices (maybe 10^4 or 10^5).
My first idea was to create template rules, "feeded" by a database. In other
words, the information about prices would be contained in the rules.
Eventually, I decided to create Prices objects, that are also inserted in the Knowledge
session (Prices become facts). The rule engine just "matches" the appropriate
price object with each product (there are other rules then to compute the final price).
Price
{
_productId ;
_beginDate ;
_endDate ;
....
_price ;
}
Product
{
_id ;
_date ;
...
_
}
Are my explanations clear enough ?
Is this a good approach or is it stupid ? Why ? What are the good practices ?
Thank you in advance for your help.
Benoît
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