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I will explain briefly my query:

match (a)-[:requires]-(b), 
      (a)-[:instanceOf]->(n)<-[:superclassOf*]-(c:Host_configuration),
      (h)-[:instanceOf]->(z)<-[:superclassOf*]-(t:Host)  
where not b = h 
return distinct a, b

My wish is to return all (a)-[:requires]-(b) patterns (where a is somehow a subclass of Host_configuration but b is not a subclass of Host.
This query however returns also nodes that actually are subclasses of Host
EDIT
I don't want to retrieve all a elements connected to b elements that are not tied to Host. I want to retrieve all patterns between a and b that are not like (a)-[:requires]-(h)

2 Answers 2

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Try this query:

match (a)-[:requires]-(b), 
      (a)-[:instanceOf]->(n)<-[:superclassOf*]-(:Host_configuration)
where not (b)-[:instanceOf]->(z)<-[:superclassOf*]-(:Host)  
return distinct a, b

It's possible to directly update the where clause with the path you want to exclude. You can define the where clause to exclude b where it is a subclass of Host.

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  1. I believe you should care about the direction of the (a)-[:requires]-(b) pattern. If you do not specify a direction, you would not know who requires whom AND you might also get the same node pair twice (in opposite orders). In my answer, I assume you meant (a)-[:requires]->(b), but you can easily reverse the direction if need be.
  2. For efficiency, you should perform both instanceOf/superclassOf tests using path patterns in a WHERE clause. Such a path pattern just checks for a single match before succeeding, and does not bother to expend the resources to hunt down all possible matches. (By the way, a path pattern in a WHERE clause cannot introduce new variables.)
  3. Once the above issues are taken care of, your MATCH clause would just be MATCH (a)-[:requires]->(b), and any given a/b pair would only be found once (as long as your DB has at most one requires relationship going from a given node to another given node). So that should mean that your RETURN clause can omit the DISTINCT option, which would be more efficient.

So, this may work better for you:

MATCH (a)-[:requires]->(b)
WHERE
  (a)-[:instanceOf]->()<-[:superclassOf*]-(:Host_configuration) AND
  NOT (b)-[:instanceOf]->()<-[:superclassOf*]-(:Host)
RETURN a, b

By the way, it would also be more efficient for the MATCH clause to specify the node labels for a and b, so that the DB does not have to scan every node in the DB. I have not done that in my answer.

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