I have implemented the database as follows: <https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-yPzp3TGpr4I/VwYwTCY-LaI/AAAAAAAABG8/n7IyLC1Oy1YAaHNu61Y7z70R8XsbcanSQ/s1600/database.jpg>
It is formed by an only vertex class called Article with one attribute(Title, like "PhysRevB.51.17512"). It is exist one relationship "cites" between two articles. Now I want to create a query that calculete the strongly connected components, can I? P.s:I can't add the author of article because in the .csv file, i have only the title of article. Thanks for support Il giorno giovedì 7 aprile 2016 06:01:12 UTC+2, scott molinari ha scritto: > > Hi Andrea, > > If you only have two attributes about articles, that isn't much of a > graph. In fact, it isn't a graph. You could have a single article class > with those two attributes in it and be done. No graph. In fact, you could > put that data basically in any database. > > If you want to come up with a good graph database example to show how it > helps with traversing relationships, you'll need to figure out the data and > the relationships within the data you want to query and learn about. For > instance, you mentioned scientific articles. What relationships can you > find in them? What relationships would you like to explore? Authors to > Articles? Topics to Authors? Articles to Authors and Topic? etc. etc. > > Once you know the relationships and data content and have it all set up, > then we can help with querying the data in ODB. > > To help you get started though, you should take a look at the Studio app > and open up the Greatful Dead database. Have a look at this article too, > which helps you make sense of ODB. > http://pettergraff.blogspot.de/2014/01/getting-started-with-orientdb.html > > Scott > -- --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OrientDB" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
