/pyke

PyKE - Python Knowledge Engine (http://pyke.sourceforge.net/)

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

Pyke: Python Knowledge Engine

This is a mirror of the original Sourceforge project, to be used as a reference and for the creation and maintenance of the PyPI package. All credit goes to Bruce Frederiksen, the original author.

The code in this repo is based only on the Python 3 version of PyKE, since Python 2 has been deprecated in 2020. The code related to Python 2 may therefore be removed.

Version: 1.1.1

Both forward-chaining and backward-chaining rules (which may include python code) are compiled into python. Can also automatically assemble python programs out of python functions which are attached to backward-chaining rules.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE:

This is published under the MIT License. The copyright and license are in the file "LICENSE" in the source directory.

DOCUMENTATION:

The complete documentation is at:

http://pyke.sourceforge.net

A copy of the html documentation is also included in the "doc/html" directory within the source distribution.

REQUIREMENTS:

Pyke requires python 2.5 or later. Check with:

$ python --version

You can download python at:

http://www.python.org

TO INSTALL:

1. Download and unzip the source distribution for the version of Python
   that you want to use.

   If you want to use Python 2.5 or 2.6, you need to use the pyke-1.1.1.zip
   sources.

   If you want to use Python 3.x, you need to use the pyke3-1.1.1.zip
   sources.

2. Open a command line window in the directory above.
3. Run "python setup.py build"
4. As administrator, run: "python setup.py install"

See http://pyke.sourceforge.net/about_pyke/installing_pyke.html for more information.

SOURCE DISTRIBUTION:

The source distribution contains the pyke source code, documentation (both source and html), unit tests, and examples.

EXAMPLES:

Each example is in a separate subdirectory under the "examples" directory. Each example has a README.txt file that explains how to run it.

The family_relations example is a good place to start. It shows several solutions to the same problem. It also has an example of a few rule optimizations that result in a 100 times performance improvement on this problem.

The sqlgen example uses Sqlite3 (or MySQL) and the python sqlite3 (or MySQLdb) modules. It has a function that reads the schema information into pyke facts. Then the rules in database.krb automatically figure out how to join tables together to retrieve a list of column names, generate the SQL select statements and return a plan to execute this SQL statement and return the results as a dictionary.

The web_framework example uses the sqlgen example. This demonstrates the use of multiple rule bases. The web_framework is a WSGI application that uses the HTMLTemplate package (install this as administrator with "pip install HTMLTemplate" or "easy_install HTMLTemplate" -- be sure to get version 1.5 or later). It gets the column names from the HTMLTemplate and feeds those to the sqlgen example to generate a plan to retrieve the data. It then builds a plan to populate the template and return the finished HTML document. It also caches the plans so that they don't have to be re-generated for each request. This makes it run a full 10 times faster than the same example done in TurboGears 2! The example includes a wsgiref simple_server setup to run it as an http server so that you can access it through your browser.

The learn_pyke example is an incomplete attempt at a computer based training program. It only deals with the topic of pattern matching. It is left here as an example of using question bases.

The findall, forall, knapsack, notany and towers_of_hanoi examples are each very small.

See http://pyke.sourceforge.net/examples.html for more information.

RUNNING DOCTESTS:

Pyke uses the doctest-tools package to run its doctests. You can run the "testall.py" program from doctest-tools in any subdirectory, or in the top-level directory. You can install doctest-tools as administrator with:

# pip install doctest-tools

The top-level directory also has it's own "testpyke" script that removes all compiled_krb directories, then runs the testall.py script (from doctest-tools) twice. The first time forces pyke to recompile everything, and the second time runs the same tests again having pyke re-use the compiled results from the previous run. If the "testpyke" program is not on your path, run it as:

$ ./testpyke

WORKING ON PYKE:

See http://pyke.sourceforge.net/about_pyke/modifying_pyke.html for information about doing development work on Pyke. Contributions of any kind are welcome!