2

I'd like to call a stored procedure (see a previous question:Question with stored procedure for Neo4J as the answer However, I can't quite see a way of doing that through the fluent query interface.

Can anyone help?

My Cypher query:

MATCH(user:UserAccount)-[:HasPermission]->(permission:Permission)
WITH user, collect(permission) as permissions
CALL apoc.map.setKey( user, 'permissions', permissions ) YIELD value as UserAccount
RETURN UserAccount

My Neo4jClient code up to now:

 _graphClient
            .Cypher
            .Match("(user:UserAccount)-[:HasPermission]->(permission:Permission)")
            .With("user, collect(permission) as permissions")
            // I need to call the stored procedure here.
            .ReturnDistinct(
                (userAccount) =>
                                new
                                {
                                    UserAccount = userAccount.As<UserAccount>()
                                });
6
  • I don't use graphclient I send cypher querys to the database so much easier. also it is complicated with label UserAccount and return UserAccount
    – Mvde
    Jun 21, 2016 at 14:48
  • I'd consider the same myself but I really like the serialization you get with neo4jclient. Although if you have an example with that and call stored procedure in, i'd be happy to see it! Jun 21, 2016 at 14:52
  • i just send it then I fill a class with my result. If you want to do something special the c# libs are not working well. I am c# programmer myself.
    – Mvde
    Jun 21, 2016 at 14:59
  • Ah ok, so you just fill the class manually? Would you consider providing a code example answer? If so i'll open a new question (although the answer you would give would kind of solve my problem, it probably wouldn't be a direct answer to the question and i'd like you to get the credit for your effort). Jun 21, 2016 at 15:11
  • I can do that, but It will take some time. i don't care about credit.
    – Mvde
    Jun 22, 2016 at 13:14

1 Answer 1

1

I'll leave the IRawGraphClient version below, but for version 1.1.0.39 (just published today) you can use Call and Yield directly:

_graphClient.Cypher
    .Match("(user:UserAccount)-[:HasPermission]->(permission:Permission)")
    .With("user, collect(permission) as permissions")
    .Call("apoc.map.setKey(user, 'permissions', permissions)").Yield("value AS UserAccount")
    .ReturnDistinct(
        (userAccount) => new { UserAccount = userAccount.As<UserAccount>() });

OLD VERSION (Avoid if you can)

Did you try the IRawGraphClient as I suggested in the GitHub bug you raised?

In essence you can cast the GraphClient instance you have to an IRawGraphClient instance:

IRawGraphClient rgc = (IRawGraphClient) client;

and then call with a query - it's a bit clunky, but would be like this:

var queryText = @"MATCH(user:UserAccount)-[:HasPermission]->(permission:Permission) 
WITH user, collect(permission) as permissions
CALL apoc.map.setKey( user, 'permissions', permissions ) YIELD value as UserAccount
RETURN UserAccount"

var cypherQuery = new CypherQuery(queryText, null, CypherResultMode.Projection);
var results = rgc.ExecuteGetCypherResults<UserAccount>(cypherQuery);

I think that will work - I don't have a 3.0 setup to test on at the moment, so can't be 100% sure, but please try and see.

I'll aim to get a .Call/.Yield<T> method sorted somepoint

5
  • Thanks for getting back to chris. I didn't know where the best place to raise the question (here or github). I'll give this a try. I was avoiding using IRawGraphClient as the docs state that you shouldn't use it unless you really need to and it can change at any point but if this is an acceptable use case then i'll give it a try. Jun 22, 2016 at 9:57
  • Yer, it's a pain, but in this case it's the best approach, I'll work at getting 'Call' and Yield there ASAP so you can go back to a proper approach! Jun 22, 2016 at 9:59
  • I did a post - that might help: geekswithblogs.net/cskardon/archive/2016/06/22/… Jun 22, 2016 at 10:00
  • 1
    Updated the client to have the Call etc methods Jun 22, 2016 at 11:16
  • Thanks Chris! That's a very fast turn around! Much appreciated! Jun 22, 2016 at 15:26

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