We consider here a typical instance of a non-trivial print tasks management problem, and we show how to handle it within Zippin, a highly interactive constraint-based environment for scheduling and decision support. The aim of Zippin is to provide the user with synthetic views of an ongoing scheduling process from multiple perspectives, allowing the user to navigate through the space of possible schedules and to make informed decisions. The navigation space is deened by a system of constraints accessed by the user through the views and by a set of software agents, which manipulate the constraints store. Constraints identify goals that agents have to fullll as well as eeects that their actions propagate into the environment. Thus, the agent model implements a type of behavior which is teleological (agents have intentions that guide their actions) and stigmergic (agents communicate through the eeects that their actions produce on the environment). We also describe how our model may be extended with agents which implement heuristic actions handling speciic scheduling problems.
«We consider here a typical instance of a non-trivial print tasks management problem, and we show how to handle it within Zippin, a highly interactive constraint-based environment for scheduling and decision support. The aim of Zippin is to provide the user with synthetic views of an ongoing scheduling process from multiple perspectives, allowing the user to navigate through the space of possible schedules and to make informed decisions. The navigation space is deened by a system of constraints a...
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