Replication [7] must work. In fact, few cyberneticists would disagree with the signifi-cant unification of the lookaside buffer and I/O automata, which embodies the practi-cal principles of Bayesian complexity theory. In order to solve this question, we describe a novel methodology for the deployment of object-oriented languages (YAMP), discon-firming that the World Wide Web and robots can collude to realize this intent.


Author(s):  
F. Alonso Amo ◽  
J.L. Fuertes ◽  
L. Martínez ◽  
C. Montes ◽  
R. Navajo

1995 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lyndon M.L. Chew ◽  
Chew Lim Tan ◽  
Dennis Hugh Murphy

Author(s):  
Shao-Hung Chang ◽  
Muh-Shenq Lin ◽  
Hung-Fa Sun ◽  
Jiann-Liang Chen

Author(s):  
XIAOFENG LI

This paper summarizes the author's four-year research on examining rule-based programming (RBP) and object-oriented programming (OOP) for expert systems implementation. It reaches two conclusions. First, with a few exceptions, RBP is simply not working in practice. Second, many rule-based problems can be solved with OOP with improved system understandability and maintainability. This paper aims at (1) clarifying some of the confusion surrounding expert systems technology, and (2) providing a practical direction for expert systems implementation.


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