Awesome stuff! Thanks for putting this together so fast. I can see this 
being a place to discover little Gremlin secrets like 'orElseGet{...}' 
(things that aren't in the official documentation). 

Is there a particular type of recipe that should be submitted? I ask 
because people could cover very simple concepts (check if edge exists), to 
moderate ones(close the triad), to complex ones (aggregates based on logic 
and groupings, etc).

On Monday, May 23, 2016 at 8:02:09 AM UTC-4, Stephen Mallette wrote:
>
> Hello all, 
>
> If you've been on the gremlin-users list for a while, you'll know that 
> there are some really good, high-quality answers to questions. 
> Unfortunately, the knowledge that they impart is often lost in long threads 
> and the endless archives of google groups. If you read enough of the kinds 
> of questions that are answered, patterns definitely emerge and the same 
> questions are just answered over and over in different ways. 
>
> We noticed that in TinkerPop 2.x and with GremlinDocs.com we had a 
> "recipes" section that had common Gremlin traversal patterns discussed in 
> it. We now have something similar in TinkerPop 3.x - Gremlin Recipes:
>
> http://tinkerpop.apache.org/docs/3.2.1-SNAPSHOT/recipes/
>
> I personally still have a fairly long list of links to "good answers" from 
> the mailing list, that I intend to translate into "recipes" over time, but 
> we have a good start for now. If someone (Kuppitz) feeds you a good answer 
> on the mailing list, a nice "thank you" would be to write up a recipe based 
> on your question and submit it as a PR. Notes for how to do that are at the 
> bottom of the recipes page.
>
> I think recipes are going to be a great resource for developers who are 
> trying to learn more about complex traversal patterns.
>
> Bon appétit
>
> Chef Stephen
>
> [image: Inline image 1]
>

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