1

I have two collections, one containing nodes, and another containing rels and nodes (see http://console.neo4j.org/?id=ijoqaa)

What I try to achieve is to update the rel properties , depending on the whether a node in one collection is also present in the other. The code below illustrates this (hopefully), although it's not valid cypher.

FOREACH (iterm in iterms|
    CASE
        WHEN NOT (iterm[1] IN iaterms) THEN
            REMOVE iterms[0].pos,iterms[0].neg
            SET iterm[0].explicit=1
    END
)

Question: what is the way to do this in cypher ?

2 Answers 2

1

Looking at what you have at the console, I think your query could be quite simple. There's no need to iterate with a foreach construction.

MATCH (u:user)-[r:RELEVANCE]->()-[ia:ISABOUT]->(t:term)
WITH u, collect(t) AS terms
MATCH (u)-[i:INTEREST]->(t2:term)
WHERE NONE(t IN terms WHERE t = t2)
REMOVE i.pos, i.neg
SET i.explicit = 1
4
  • thanks @tstorms. I'm afraid that your answer is not correct, since it does not update the correct rels. After running your cypher, you get this console.neo4j.org/?id=es9hti while it should be the "Television" relation that is updated. Also, the performace will be an issue, since we have a couple of 100k docs with each up to 100 [:ISABOUT] rels. From what I see, the collection route is considerably faster.
    – Graphileon
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:01
  • Hope I fully understand your question now. I've updated the query @Ophileon.
    – tstorms
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:30
  • solution seems to work. The one in the other answer too. Will try against larger dataset, to see which one to accept. thanks to both of you.
    – Graphileon
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:51
  • ok guys. Although unexpected, I see hardly any difference in terms of performance , even with a dataset with a 10k docs, 12k terms and a total of 1M [:ISABOUT] rels. I will accept @jjaderberg 's answer , because it's shorter and uses a single match. I know it's arbitrary but I hope you can both live with it.
    – Graphileon
    Mar 18, 2014 at 16:52
0

Does this work?

MATCH (u:user)-[i:INTEREST]->(t)
WHERE NOT u-[:RELEVANCE]->()-[:ISABOUT]->t
REMOVE i.neg, i.pos
SET i.explicit = 1
2
  • solution seems to work. The one in the other answer too. Will try against larger dataset, to see which one to accept. thanks to both of you.
    – Graphileon
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:52
  • ok guys. Although unexpected, I see hardly any difference in terms of performance , even with a dataset with a 10k docs, 12k terms and a total of 1M [:ISABOUT] rels. I will accept @jjaderberg 's answer , because it's shorter and uses a single match. I know it's arbitrary but I hope you can both live with it.
    – Graphileon
    Mar 18, 2014 at 16:53

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