Sorry again.
The problem was in this thread
http://lists.neo4j.org/pipermail/user/2010-April/003342.html
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 6:47 AM, Tobias Ivarsson
wrote:
> What are you trying to achieve?
>
> I see no problem description, just a solution, and I don't understand what
> it is supposed to sol
What are you trying to achieve?
I see no problem description, just a solution, and I don't understand what
it is supposed to solve.
Your first mail looks like it might be a response to some other mail, but in
that case the first e-mail never made it to the list.
Cheers,
Tobias
On Fri, May 14, 2
Sorry for bad identation.
I wrote a n-stages return evaluator and its works fine.
public class MainClass {
public static void main(String[] args) {
GraphDatabaseService graphDb = new
EmbeddedReadOnlyGraphDatabase("/path/to/db");
Transaction tx = graphDb.beginTx();
try {
No
>
> H...
> I am guessing the most efficient way might be to have a two stage return
evaluator.
> E.g. The custom return evaluator class has a hash table of =>
pairs. Each time 'isReturnableNode' is called, it increments the
count for that node id in the hash. If count >= return the no
pth-first search and that's it.
>Alastair James schrieb am 09.04.2010 um 14:04:37 (+0100)
>[Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
>
>>* So, I suppose this question boils down to, is there an efficient way*>>* to
>>calculate the union of two traversals without
fast...
Do you have any code that can create a dummy data set in Neo4J? If you
do, I'd be willing to give it a try...
Original Message
Subject: Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?
From: Michael Ludwig
Date: Fri, April 09, 2010 2:44 pm
To:
Alastair James schrieb am 09.04.2010 um 14:04:37 (+0100)
[Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
> So, I suppose this question boils down to, is there an efficient way
> to calculate the union of two traversals without retrieving all result
> sets and performing the union in
On 9 April 2010 14:21, Max De Marzi Jr. wrote:
> On first traversal, add a relationship to a "found node" to each node that
> would return, and check for this relationship on the second traversal?
> Maybe create a unique id, set a property or add a node property with the
> unique id on the first
On first traversal, add a relationship to a "found node" to each node that
would return, and check for this relationship on the second traversal?
Maybe create a unique id, set a property or add a node property with the
unique id on the first traversal, and check for this property on the second
trav
On 9 April 2010 07:50, Peter Neubauer wrote:
> Marko and me tried to summarize what is working especially good with
> Graph Databases and what not:
>
Yes, but in my mind, my use case is a *perfect* example of what should work
well in a graph DB. It is an exact example of inforamtion organised by
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 12:33 AM, Michael Ludwig wrote:
> rick.bullotta schrieb am 08.04.2010 um 15:16:11 (-0700)
> [Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
>
>> Factor in a wide range of SLAs needed for performance vs availability
>> vs affordability vs scalability vs a
rick.bullotta schrieb am 08.04.2010 um 15:16:11 (-0700)
[Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
> Factor in a wide range of SLAs needed for performance vs availability
> vs affordability vs scalability vs adminstration costs, and the
> equation gets a whole lot more complicated.
ur data model. However,
can I query it efficiently without domain specific hacks and extra layers of
code?".
Al
>
>
>
> Original Message
> Subject: Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?
> From: Michael Ludwig
> Date: Thu, April 08, 2010 6:02
Hi...
On 8 April 2010 22:35, Michael Ludwig wrote:
> After giving this some thought, it looks to me as if there is nothing
> particularly graphy in your example. I know, most everything is a graph,
> but here the data is more regular: Your hierarchical catalog of tags
> immediately made me think
ication challenges!
---- Original Message ----
Subject: Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?
From: Michael Ludwig
Date: Thu, April 08, 2010 6:02 pm
To: Neo user discussions
Max De Marzi Jr. schrieb am 08.04.2010 um 16:48:18 (-0500)
[Re: [Neo] How to effici
On 8 April 2010 11:43, wrote:
> Just trying to make the point that sometime abstract or generic
> traversal schemes aren't always optimal and that it is often worth the
> effor to explore domain-specific approaches.
>
The message from this thread seems to be that a) the graph model is great
Max De Marzi Jr. schrieb am 08.04.2010 um 16:48:18 (-0500)
[Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
> You know this is something that I think needs to be made clear...
> using just the graph is not the right way to go unless you have a very
> special application.
> Some thing
h,
manages, knows, friends, etc).
I treat the graph like a specialized index.
Makes a lot more sense now, and I get the best of both worlds.
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 4:35 PM, Michael Ludwig wrote:
> Alastair James schrieb am 07.04.2010 um 15:53:50 (+0100)
> [[Neo] How to efficientl
Alastair James schrieb am 07.04.2010 um 15:53:50 (+0100)
[[Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?]:
> Briefly, the site consists of posts, each tagged with various
> attributes, e.g. (its a travel site) location, theme, cost etc... Also
> the tags are hierarchical. So, for location we
ys optimal and that it is often worth the
effor to explore domain-specific approaches.
Does that make any sense?
-------- Original Message ----
Subject: Re: [Neo] How to efficiently query in Neo4J?
From: Craig Taverner
Date: Wed, April 07, 2010 7:05 pm
To: Neo user
Hi Alastair,
I have been using what you tag the 'composite index' although in mysql. Its
> fast, but a pain to manage (as you need to keep the index up to date), so I
> would like to stay away from indexes *if possible*.
>
I would think that you only need to take action when you add or modify a
n
Excellent analysis Craig.
I have been using what you tag the 'composite index' although in mysql. Its
fast, but a pain to manage (as you need to keep the index up to date), so I
would like to stay away from indexes *if possible*.
>One concern is that it needs to keep a hash of all nodes that matc
This is a very interesting discussion because I've been working on a
solution I call a 'composite index' that, for some datasets, should return
the correct results in one simple traverse, with no temporary memory used,
but first my high level view of this:
I think there are several types of soluti
H...
I am guessing the most efficient way might be to have a two stage return
evaluator.
E.g. The custom return evaluator class has a hash table of =>
pairs. Each time 'isReturnableNode' is called, it increments the
count for that node id in the hash. If count >= return the node.
Thus, if
this PostNode in your
results
I'd love to know if there's a more effective way to do this as well!
Rick
-Original Message-
From: user-boun...@lists.neo4j.org [mailto:user-boun...@lists.neo4j.org] On
Behalf Of Alastair James
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 10:54 AM
To: Neo user d
I've had similar issues and they way I've done it (which may not be the
right way) is to run the first traversal and store the returned nodes. Then
run the second traversal and return only if it is contained in the set of
returned nodes in the first traversal.
The traverses hit each node only onc
Hi there...
I am looking at moving a website to a model based on Neo4J, however, I am
having trouble seeing how to optimise the 'main query' type for Neo4J.
Briefly, the site consists of posts, each tagged with various attributes,
e.g. (its a travel site) location, theme, cost etc... Also the tag
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