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I'm trying to start traversing from one set of labelled vertices, then get all their in-vertices connected by a particular kind of edge, then from there, return a property of those in-vertices as objects. I can do this same thing with some out-vertices starting from the same set of labelled vertices with no problem, but get a "The provided traverser does not map to a value:" error when I attempt it with some in-vertices.

I have found a workaround, but it is not ideal, as it returns the desired property values as arrays of length one.

Here is how I do the very similar task successfully with out-vertices: g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').project('address').by(out('physical').project('street').by(values('street1')))

This returns things like

==>{address={street=561 PLACE DE CEDARE}}
==>{address={street=370 N BLACK STATION AVE}}

This is great!

Then I try the same sort of query with some in-vertices, like this: g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').project('host').by(__.in('hosts').project('aCode').by(values('code'))) and get the above mentioned error.

The workaround I've been able to find is to add a .fold() to the final "by" like this: g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').project('host').by(__.in('hosts').project('aCode').by(values('code')).fold()) but then my responses are like this

==>{host=[{aCode=7387}]}
==>{host=[{aCode=9160}]}

What I would like is a response looking like this:

==>{host={aCode=4325}}
==>{host={aCode=1234}}

(Note: I am not sure if this is relevant, but I am connecting Gremlin to a Neptune DB Instance)

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  • Also, oddly, adding .limit(n) at the end, where n<=100 or so works exactly as desired, but far more are needed and with larger numbers or without the .limit(n) it returns the same error. Jul 3, 2019 at 14:01

1 Answer 1

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It seems to me from the error above and your workaround that not all of your 'TestCenter' have an in edge from type 'hosts'. When using project the by have to map for a valid value.

you can do two things:

1) make sure a value will be returned in the project:

g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').project('host')
     .by(coalesce(__.in('hosts').project('aCode').by(values('code')), constant('empty')))

2) filter does values:

g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').where(__.in('hosts'))
.project('host').by(__.in('hosts').project('aCode').by(values('code')))
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  • Suggestion 1 was not an issue because the codes were always present (and I had tried that already just in case only to get the same old error), but suggestion 2 seems to work! Thank you!! Jul 3, 2019 at 14:32
  • Also, any idea why this would work with the where filter and not the way I was originally trying it? Jul 3, 2019 at 15:01
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    As I wrote, I think you have 'TestCenter' without an in edge from type 'hosts'. try to run g.V().hasLabel('TestCenter').not(__.in('hosts')) to confirm this.
    – noam621
    Jul 3, 2019 at 15:10
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    You are correct! I was unaware of this (and it shouldn't be the case) and when I originally tried your first suggestion I got an error, but I must have made a mistake. Thanks again. I wish I had the reputation to upvote your answer. Jul 3, 2019 at 15:21

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