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Jadex Rules is a small lightweight rule engine, which currently employs the well-known Rete algorithm for highly efficient rule matching. Jadex rules is therefore similar to other rule engines like JESS and Drools. Despite the similarities there are also important differences between these systems: * Jadex Rules is very small and intended to be used as component of other software. Even though rules can be specified in a Java dialect as well as (a small variation of) the CLIPS language its primary usage is on the API level. Jadex Rules is currently the core component of the Jadex BDI reasoning engine. * Jadex Rules cleanly separates between state and rule representation. This allows the state implementation as well as the matcher to be flexibly exchanged. Some experiments have e.g. been conducted with a Jena representation. Regarding the matcher, it is planned to support also the Treat algorithm, which has a lower memory footprint than Rete. * Jadex Rules pays close attention to rule debugging. The state as well as the rete engine can be observed at runtime. The rule debugger provides functionalities to execute a rule program stepwise and also use rule breakpoints to stop the execution at those points.

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package jadex.rules.rulesystem.rete.extractors;

import jadex.commons.SUtil;
import jadex.rules.rulesystem.rete.Tuple;
import jadex.rules.rulesystem.rules.ILazyValue;
import jadex.rules.rulesystem.rules.functions.IFunction;
import jadex.rules.state.IOAVState;
import jadex.rules.state.OAVAttributeType;

/**
 *  A function extractor has the purpose to call a function
 *  and return the result value.
 */
public class FunctionExtractor implements IValueExtractor
{
	//-------- attributes --------
	
	/** The function. */
	protected IFunction function;
	
	/** The extractors. */
	protected IValueExtractor[] extractors;
	
	//-------- constructors --------
	
	/**
	 *  Create a new evaluator.
	 */
	public FunctionExtractor(IFunction function, IValueExtractor[] extractors)
	{
		this.function = function;
		this.extractors = extractors;
	}
	
	//-------- methods --------
	
	/**
	 *  Get the value of an attribute from an object or tuple.
	 *  @param left The left input tuple. 
	 *  @param right The right input object.
	 *  @param prefix The prefix input object (last value from previous extractor in a chain).
	 *  @param state The working memory.
	 */
	public Object getValue(final Tuple left, final Object right, final Object prefix, final IOAVState state)
	{
		// Fetch the parameter values.
		Object[] paramvalues = new Object[extractors.length];
		for(int i=0; i0)
				ret.append(", ");
			ret.append(extractors[i]);
		}
		ret.append(")");
		return ret.toString();
	}

	/**
	 *  Get the value extractors.
	 */
	public IValueExtractor[] getValueExtractors()
	{
		return extractors;
	}

	/**
	 *  Get the function.
	 */
	public IFunction getFunction()
	{
		return function;
	}
	
	/**
	 *  The hash code.
	 */
	public int hashCode()
	{
		int	result	= 31 + (function!=null ? function.hashCode() : 0);
		// Arrays.hashCode(Object[]): JDK 1.5
		result	= result*31 + SUtil.arrayHashCode(extractors);
		return result;
	}

	/**
	 *  Test for equality.
	 */
	public boolean equals(Object obj)
	{
		if(this==obj)
			return true;

		boolean	ret	= false;
		if(obj instanceof FunctionExtractor)
		{
			FunctionExtractor	other	= (FunctionExtractor)obj;
			ret	= SUtil.equals(extractors, other.getFunction())
				&& SUtil.equals(function, other.getFunction());
		}
		return ret;
	}
}





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