Basic Operations and Compatibility
Basic Operations
Operation |
Cypher Statement |
---|---|
Querying vertices |
match (n) return n |
Querying edges |
match (n)-[r]->(m) return n, r, m |
Querying paths |
match (n:user)-[r]->(m:movie)-->(s:series) return n,r,m,s |
Querying information by specifying filtering criteria |
match(n:user) where n.userid>=5 return n |
Grouping and aggregating |
match(n:movie) return n.genres, count(*) |
Deduplicating |
match(n:movie) return distinct n.genres |
Sorting |
match(n:movie) return n order by n.movieid |
Creating a vertex |
create (n:user{userid:1}) return n |
Creating an edge |
match (n:user{userid:15}),(m:movie{movieid:10}) create (n)-[r:rate]->(m) |
Deleting a vertex |
match (n:user{userid:1}) delete n |
Modifying labels |
match (n:user{userid:1}) set n:movie return n |
Modifying properties |
match (n:user{userid:1}) set n.userid=2 return n |
Compatibility to Cypher
- Cypher clauses
Cypher implements a couple of clauses. You can combine clauses to implement different query semantics, including vertex and edge filtering, multi-hop query, sorting and deduplication, and grouping and aggregation.
Currently, GES supports the Cypher clauses listed in the following table.
Table 1 Supported Cypher clauses Clause
Support
Example
match
Partially supported
match (n:movie) return n
optional match
Partially supported
optional match (n)-->(m) where id(n)='1' return m
return
Supported
return [1,2,3] as p
with
Supported
match (n) with labels(n) as label, count(*) as count
where count > 10 return *
where
Supported
match (n:movie) where n.movieid > 10 return n
order by
Supported
match (n:movie) return n order by n.genres
skip
Supported
match (n:movie) return n order by n.genres skip 5
limit
Supported
match (n:movie) return n order by n.genres skip 5 limit 10
create
Supported
create (n:user{_ID_: 'Jack' }) return n
delete
Supported
match (n:movie)<-[r]-(m:user) delete r
set
Supported
match (n:user{userid:0}) set n.gender='M' return n
call procedures
Supported
call db.schema()
unwind
Supported
unwind [1, 2, 3] as p return p
union
Supported
match (n:movie) return id(n) union match (n:user) return id(n)
NOTE:Union is available for graphs smaller than 10 billion edges only.
- Currently, merge and foreach operations are not supported. Cypher statements cannot add or delete indexes.
- GES metadata is not schema-free, and the vertex and edge label properties are strictly restricted. Therefore, the remove operation is not supported.
- The order by clause does not support sorting of the list type. When Cardinality of the property value is not single, the sorting result is unknown.
- Available items for the match clause
Item
Description
Example Clauses
Earliest Version Required
Vertex pattern
Patterns for matching vertex with specified labels, properties, and IDs.
match (n:movie{title:'hello'})
match (n) where id(n)='xx'
2.2.16
Edge pattern
Patterns for matching directional and non-directional edges with specified labels and properties. Specified IDs of both start and end vertices are supported.
match (n)-[r] -> (m)
match (n)-[r]- (m)
match (n)-[r:rate{Rating:1}] - (m)
match (n)-[r]- (m) where id(n)='x'and id(m)='y'
2.2.16
Path
Anonymous paths
match (n)-[r]->(m)-->(s)
2.2.16
Named paths
match p=(n)-[r]->(m)-->(s)
2.2.19
Multiple patterns
You can enter multiple patterns after match and separate them with commas (,).
match (n)-[r]->(m), (m)-->(s)
2.2.16
Multi-match
You can enter multiple match clauses. You can use with to connect multiple clauses.
match (n)-[r]->(m) with m match (m)-->(s)
2.2.16
Variable-length path pattern
Patterns for matching variable-length paths starting with a specified vertex.
match p=(n)-[r*1..3]->(m) where id(n)='xx'return p
match p=(n{title:'name'})-[r*1..3]->(m) return p
2.2.19
Traversal conditions for matching variable-length paths.
match p=(n)-[r*1..3]->(m) where id(n)='xx'and all (x in nodes(p) where x.prop='value1') return p
2.2.28
Both start vertex and end vertex of a variable-length path can be specified.
match p=(n)-[r*1..3]->(m) where id(n)='xx' and id(m)='y' return p
2.3.9
Deduplication by end vertex is not supported:
match p=(n)-[r*1..3]->(m) where id(n)='xx' and id(m)='yy'return distinct m
No
- Parameterized queries
Cypher supports parameterized queries. Numeric and string values in a query statement are extracted and converted to parameters for faster compilation, improving the query speed.
There are some examples of parameterized queries:
- Example 1
POST http://{SERVER_URL}/ges/v1.0/{project_id}/graphs/{graph_name}/action?action_id=execute-cypher-query { "statements": [{ "statement": " match (n:user) where n.occupation = $occupation return n", "parameters": { "occupation" : "artist" }, "resultDataContents": ["row"] }] }
- Example 2
POST http://{SERVER_URL}/ges/v1.0/{project_id}/graphs/{graph_name}/action?action_id=execute-cypher-query { "statements": [{ "statement": " match (n:user {`Zip-code`:'98133'}) set n = $props return n", "parameters": { "props": { "gender": "M", "age": "56+" } }, "resultDataContents": ["row"] }] }
There are some scenarios where parameterized queries are not supported. The following syntax is not valid:
- Using $param to search by property key and value. For example, match (n) where n.$param = 'something'
- Using $code for vertex and edge labels. For example, match (n:user) set n:$code
- Example 1
- Supported data types
Currently, GES supports 10 data types: char, char_array, float, double, Boolean, long, Integer, date, enum, and string. Both Boolean and numeric types are supported in the Cypher syntax. The following table lists the mapping between other types and Cypher data types.
Table 2 Mapping between data types of GES and Cypher GES
Cypher
Description
char
String
-
char_array
String
-
string
String
-
date
Temporal
Currently, Cypher dates can be converted into GES dates, but Cypher date functions cannot be used for inputting a date.
Table 3 Special types supported by Cypher Type
Supported
Example
Node
Yes
match (n) return n limit 10
Relationship
Yes
match (n)-[r]->(m) return r limit 10
List
Yes
return [1,2,3] as li
Map
Yes
match (n)-->(m) return {start:id(n), end:id(m)}
Path
Yes
match p=(n1)-[:friends*1..2]-(n2) return p limit 10
Point, Spatial
No
-
For the special types listed above, only the List type can be used to match multi-value properties in GES. Other types cannot be used in a set statement for setting the value of a property.
- Vertex ID compatibility
- Cypher does not provide the syntax for setting the ID when a vertex is added. In GES, however, an ID of the string type is required to uniquely identify a vertex. To use the Cypher syntax in GES, add _ID_ to specify the ID of a vertex in the create statement. For example, the create(n{_ID_:'123456'}) statement creates a vertex whose ID is 123456.
- If the ID is not specified, a random ID is generated for the vertex.
The _ID_ identifier is supported only in the create statement. The match and set clauses do not support the _ID_ identifier. In the match clause, you can use the id() function to obtain the vertex ID.
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