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Item

        Items are the core of the budget. These represent sets of the
        various rows of a given dataset (line items in the budget,
        employees in the dataset). 

        Items are selected from dropdowns, with one top level dropdown for
        each dataset. Within these, the various identifiers
        (e.g. department, fund, etc.) can be selected to modify the set of
        rows that you're examining. At any given level, multiple
        identifiers can be selected, which is the equivalent of an or
        (e.g. if you select Fire department and Police department, the
        item set contains all line items in both departments). Identifiers
        are organized in hierarchical trees, with each tree being
        independant of each other (so department is above division is
        above program, superfund is above fund is above subfund, etc.),
        and as many identifiers from each tree can be specified in order
        to narrow down a set. One does not need to traverse all the way
        down the tree. For example, if you just want to look at the Fire
        department, you do not need to select divisions within it. By
        default all are selected. You can, however, select only specific
        divsions if desired.

        If one just wants to select a single identifier (e.g. Fire
        Department), rather than checking all their identifiers they can
        simply drag that item from the list. Dragged items automatically
        inherent their parents identifiers (e.g. if you drag the
        administration division within the fire department dropdown, the
        fire department identifier is automatically applied).

        Items can be dragged to the current rule, in which case they are
        treated as some operation on the set of items in order to make a
        single value. By default the default field of the set is
        summed. I'll explain what that means:
        
        Field:
        
                In addition to having identifiers (department etc.) in a
                row you also have fields, the numerical data (e.g. salary,
                dental benefits, etc.). In order to 'sum' a set of items,
                we have to specify a field (e.g. row 1's salary + row 2's
                salary + ...) that we are summing on. This can be done by
                opening the field tab, where a list of available fields is
                show. One then simply needs to drag these fields over an
                item, and that item will be modified to have set
                operations act on that field. 
                
                Note that if you want to operate on two fields, e.g. you
                want the sum of all row's dental and medical benifits,
                this must be done with two seperate items. That is to say,
                you must sum all of the rows' dental benifits, and then add
                that to the sum of all the rows' medical benifits. 
                
       Set Operators:

                In order to produce a single numerical value from a set of
                line items/employees, an operation must be applied to each
                of the values within that set. Simply adding things
                together is the default, but several other operations are
                available. In order to select one of these operations, the
                set operations tab must be opened and one of the buttons
                dragged over an item. That item will be modified to use
                that set operations

           
       In addition to these two set operators, there are two other item
       modifiers which can be dragged to modify an item in the same way:

       Year: 
       
                Year specifies which year of data to look at, and can be
                specified in 4 ways. The default is to simply use the
                current year (as in the year the rule is applied, not the
                year that the rule is created). Another is to use the last
                year specifier, which simply looks at the previous years
                data. Other than that, years can be refered to relatively
                (x years ago) or absolutely (2009) and used to modify an
                item. 

       Condition: 
       
                Conditions are used to narrow a set by testing the field
                of an item. For example, you may want to collect the set
                of all employees who have two dependents. To do this, you
                would create an item that is all employees. Then, you
                would open the condition tab; you can then drag the field
                you want to check (in this case dependants), and compare
                it to some numerical value or perhaps some other
                field. One then drags this condition over the item they
                want to modify, and the set is automatically trimmed to
                contain only the things that fill that condition. 
                
      When a modifier is applied to an item, a small indicator appears on
      the item. Modifiers can be removed by dragging that indicator away
      from the item.

      Member Rules:
      
      Items can be used in another way as well. When the 'Make Member
      Rule' tab is opened, an item can be dragged to the sandbox
      there. This will initiate the making of a 'member rule'. Member
      rules apply a rule to each row within a set. Specification changes a
      little bit in this environment. The -THIS- specifier gets added to
      the item selector. What -THIS- does is always take on the identifier
      of the current member. So, for example, if you're operating on all
      line items in the fire department, you can use the -this- division
      tag to ensure that any individual line item in the department is no
      greater than 10% of the sum of the division it's in. The rule would
      look like

           (amount) (<) (.1) (X) (Sum Fire Department, -THIS- Division)

      -THIS- appears at the top level of the hierarchy, even if an
       identifier is already specified. For example, for the member rule
       mentioned Fire department is specified, so there's no need for a
       -THIS- department specifier, but for convenience it's still
       available.

       One intesting behavior to note about -THIS-. Even though it's
       presented hierarchically like other specifiers in the tree, it has
       slightly different selection behavior. For one, even if this is not
       selected, a branch can still be fullchecked (have a full checkmark
       indicating all subspecifiers are checked), and clicking on a parent
       does not automatically check -THIS- specifiers below
       it. Additionally, in a situation where the user is presented with
       -THIS- department and -THIS- division below it, selecting -THIS-
       department does not imply -THIS- division, although the reverse is
       true. So unlike other items in the list/tree, checking the parent
       -THIS- does not check the child -THIS-. This also means if you want
       to look at both the department and division of an item, you have to
       traverse the list. 

       Each Rules:

       There are situation where one wants to apply rules to every
       specifier group (I.E. Each department can only grow 10 percent in a
       year), in which case one uses the -EACH- specifier at the bottom of
       the dropdown. These can be dragged into the sandbox in the 'Make
       Iteration Rule' (name should be changed) tab. Like member rules, a
       -THIS- specifier appears for every -EACH- specifier in the item (so
       if you have EACH department and EACH superfund, -THIS- department
       and -THIS- superfund will appear. (One thing to consider is
       allowing set operators to be dragged into the 'each rule' sandbox,
       in the same way fields work in member rules).

Operators:

        Operators are mathematical operators that operate on numerical
        values in the field. +, -, *, / , maybe more

Comparator:

        Comparators are the enforcement element of a rule. They ensure
        relationships between numerical values (less than, greater than,
        equal). Right now assignment for member rules (where an item is
        directly assigned, rather than an error being raised if the rule
        doesn't match), is under this tab, but it probably shouldn't be.

Value:

        Values are numerical values.       
      
        
Semantics:

      Rules and conditions follow some basic semantics. For rules, as of
      now, operators and comparators can only follow nouns, nouns cannot
      follow eachother, and fields must have at least one item coming
      before (they are assumed to use that items specifiers if not
      attached to a particular item).  There must be exactly one
      comparator in a rule. (right now, rules that are 'both  less than x
      and greater than y' are not supported, but could easily be
      added). There must be at least one budget item. Rules must end in a
      noun. Assignments are only valid after a single item.

      Conditions have some slight differences. Items in  conditions are
      replaced with fields, and some rules, such as fields having to
      follow an item, do not apply.     

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