Deterministic computation
RiGEL evaluates governance rules using deterministic logic to produce consistent and reproducible outcomes.
The same rules and inputs always produce the same result.
What deterministic means
Deterministic systems produce the same output whenever the same inputs and rules are applied. There is no randomness and no interpretation—given identical inputs and rules, the outcome is always identical.
This removes ambiguity from governance decisions. When a member applies for a benefit or a trustee evaluates a distribution, the engine applies the encoded rules to the provided inputs and produces a result. That result can be reproduced at any time by rerunning the same evaluation.
How the engine works
The evaluation flow combines inputs, rules, and logic to produce a computed decision.
Inputs
- • Member data
- • Application details
- • Financial inputs
Rules
- • Eligibility rules
- • Financial rules
- • Approval logic
Outcome
Computed decision based on the evaluation of inputs against rules.
The engine evaluates inputs against each rule and produces a final outcome. The same inputs and rules always yield the same result.
Why determinism matters
Consistency
The same logic is applied every time. No interpretation drift or spreadsheet variations.
Transparency
Every decision can be traced to the rules and inputs that produced it.
Reproducibility
Run the same inputs through the engine again and receive the same outcome—every time.
Accountability
Leadership and administrators can demonstrate exactly how decisions were reached.
Governance decisions should be reproducible
See how RiGEL's deterministic engine evaluates rules and produces consistent outcomes.
