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Summary

Dialogues can be strongly dependent on business rules. These business rules are intended for the realization of intelligent forms of an application. Some business rules needed for intelligent forms are from the domain layers, as they concern the core logic of the business. Other rules are created just to make the page more dynamic and give the end user a better experience. The latter are located in the user interface layer.

In this example we regard a problem diagnosis for house repairs. When something breaks in your house you want to indicate the problem to the landlord so that a propert repair can be scheduled. What is exactly broken can not be known by the inhabitant, but is important to know so that the appropriate equipment is brought for the reparation.

 

Problem

When there is a problem in the household, the landlord can be called with a desciption of the problem. The landlord asks clarification questions in order to dispatch the correct repairman. In case that the user comes to a Blueriq application with the problem, the same clarification questions need to be asked. The difference to a standard input form is that the next question to be asked to the end user is highly dependent on the answers give so far. The end user should only get relevant questions and as few as possible to come to a conclusion about the problem.

A great example is the case of the pilot light in the water boiler. If this small fire is distinguished, no warm water is produced and so components as the radiator or the shower may not work. The inhabitant however has no idea what a pilot light is, and goes to the Blueriq application with a problem in mind: my house is cold. What questions should we ask the end user in order to deduce that there is a pilot light problem?

Examples could be:

  • Do you hear water running when you turn the radioator on?
  • Is there warm water in the shower?
  • Does your light turn on?
  • Do you see a small flame in the water boiler?
    • Possibly preceeded by "Do you know where your water boiler is and how it looks like?"

 

In Blueriq both the domain logic and page logic is modelled using Business Rules and Decision Tables. In an example such as this, the preconditions on the page might be heavily dependent on domain knowledge. We have to think carefully on what is page specific and belongs in the interface layer, and what is domain knowledge and belongs in the domain layer.

Important factors for this problem is the truth maintenance of the rule engine, The end user has the possibility to change earlier answers and there is no manner to handle this in the flow in a maintainable manner. We therefore only consider patterns which derive system-set values.

Contents

Decouple category

Properties

Property

Description

Decouple category

Front-end (4)

Complexity

High

Related patterns/solutions

Solutions

External rule

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Module with Flow

We split the application into two modules, one with all logic of the domain, and one containing logic for the application. The latter is stacked on the former to make use of its content. The advantage of this approach is that the rule engine can do its work and supporting features of Blueriq are available. With a clear differentiation in module, and in naming of the domain it can be clear to the business engineer what is located where. What is not clear is what part of the business domain is internal. This can lead to unwanted side effects when refactoring.

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Issues and considerations

With the current possbilities in Blueriq, we advice to use Decoupling Pattern 1: Module with Flow [editor]. One has to clearly indicate what attributes can be used and act as interface and which do not.

One approach which one may look at are Decision trees. With this approach there exists no page specific logic at all, as the page content is created dynamically based on rules in the domain layer. We regard decision trees as a pattern which specifically addresses the separation of the user interface layer and the domain layer, and it can not be used in a different context. One drawback of the decision tree is that all control of the page structure is transfered to the rule engine. If the generated pages are not satisfactory, no tweaking is possible.

 

 

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