Neo4j Notes - Cypher Manual Chapter 3

3 Clauses

See simpler version at this doc
See full introduction here

3.1 MATCH

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3.1.1 Intro

3.1.2 Basic node finding

Too simple, omitted.

3.1.3 Relationship basics

Too simple, omitted.

3.1.4 Relationships in depth

3.1.4.1 Relationship types with uncommon characters

MATCH (charlie:Person { name: 'Charlie Sheen' }),(rob:Person { name: 'Rob Reiner' })
CREATE (rob)-[:`TYPE
WITH SPACE`]->(charlie)

Which leads to the following graph:


Graph 2.png

3.1.4.2 Multiple relationships

MATCH (charlie { name: 'Charlie Sheen' })-[:ACTED_IN]->(movie)<-[:DIRECTED]-(director)
RETURN movie.title, director.name

3.1.4.3. Variable length relationships

using the following syntax: -[:TYPE*minHops..maxHops]→. minHops and maxHops are optional and default to 1 and infinity respectively.

MATCH (martin { name: 'Charlie Sheen' })-[:ACTED_IN*1..3]-(movie:Movie)
RETURN movie.title

result:

movie.title
"Wall Street"
"The American President"
"The American President"

3.1.4.4 Relationship variable in variable length relationships

When the connection between two nodes is of variable length, the list of relationships comprising the connection can be returned using the following syntax:

MATCH p =(actor { name: 'Charlie Sheen' })-[:ACTED_IN*2]-(co_actor)
RETURN relationships(p)
relationships(p)
[:ACTED_IN[0]{role:"Bud Fox"},:ACTED_IN[1]{role:"Carl Fox"}]
[:ACTED_IN[0]{role:"Bud Fox"},:ACTED_IN[2]{role:"Gordon Gekko"}]

3.1.4.5. Match with properties on a variable length path

MATCH (charlie:Person { name: 'Charlie Sheen' }),(martin:Person { name: 'Martin Sheen' })
CREATE (charlie)-[:X { blocked: FALSE }]->(:UNBLOCKED)<-[:X { blocked: FALSE }]-(martin)
CREATE (charlie)-[:X { blocked: TRUE }]->(:BLOCKED)<-[:X { blocked: FALSE }]-(martin)
image.png
MATCH p =(charlie:Person)-[* { blocked:false }]-(martin:Person)
WHERE charlie.name = 'Charlie Sheen' AND martin.name = 'Martin Sheen'
RETURN p

result:

p
(0)-[X,20]->(20)<-[X,21]-(1)

3.1.4.6 Zero length paths

If the path length between two nodes is zero, they are by definition the same node.

MATCH (wallstreet:Movie { title: 'Wall Street' })-[*0..1]-(x)
RETURN x

Returns the movie itself as well as actors and directors one relationship away

3.1.4.7 Named paths

MATCH p =(michael { name: 'Michael Douglas' })-->()
RETURN p

result:

p
(2)-[ACTED_IN,5]->(6)
(2)-[ACTED_IN,2]->(5)

3.1.4.8. Matching on a bound relationship

MATCH (a)-[r]-(b)
WHERE id(r)= 0
RETURN a,b
a                                                  b
Node[0]{name:"Charlie Sheen"}                      Node[5]{title:"Wall Street"}

Node[5]{title:"Wall Street"}                       Node[0]{name:"Charlie Sheen"}

3.1.5 Shortest path

3.1.5.1. Single shortest path

MATCH (martin:Person { name: 'Martin Sheen' }),(oliver:Person { name: 'Oliver Stone' }), p = shortestPath((martin)-[*..15]-(oliver))
RETURN p

3.1.5.2. Single shortest path with predicates

MATCH (charlie:Person { name: 'Charlie Sheen' }),(martin:Person { name: 'Martin Sheen' }), p = shortestPath((charlie)-[*]-(martin))
WHERE NONE (r IN relationships(p) WHERE type(r)= 'FATHER')
RETURN p

3.1.5.3. All shortest paths

MATCH (martin:Person { name: 'Martin Sheen' }),(michael:Person { name: 'Michael Douglas' }), p = allShortestPaths((martin)-[*]-(michael))
RETURN p

3.1.6. Get node or relationship by id

3.1.6.1 Node by id

3.1.6.2 Relationship by id

3.1.6.3 Multiple nodes by id

MATCH (n)
WHERE id(n) IN [0, 3, 5]
RETURN n

3.2 OPTIONAL MATCH

3.2.1 Introduction

OPTIONAL MATCH will use a null for missing parts of the pattern. OPTIONAL MATCH could be considered the Cypher equivalent of the outer join in SQL.

3.2.2 Optional Relationships

MATCH (a:Movie { title: 'Wall Street' })
OPTIONAL MATCH (a)-->(x)
RETURN x

return <null>

3.2.3 Properties on optional elements

MATCH (a:Movie { title: 'Wall Street' })
OPTIONAL MATCH (a)-->(x)
RETURN x, x.name

return <null> <null>

3.2.4. Optional typed and named relationship

MATCH (a:Movie { title: 'Wall Street' })
OPTIONAL MATCH (a)-[r:ACTS_IN]->()
RETURN a.title, r

return "Wall Street" <null>

3.4 RETURN

Too simple, omitted part content.

3.4.5. Return all elements

MATCH p =(a { name: 'A' })-[r]->(b)
RETURN *

will return two nodes, the relationship and the path used in the query.

3.4.10. Unique results

MATCH (a { name: 'A' })-->(b)
RETURN DISTINCT b

3.5 WITH

3.5.1 Introduction

Using WITH, you can manipulate the output before it is passed on to the following query parts.
Three common usage:

  • to limit the number of entries that are then passed on to other MATCH clauses.
  • to filter on aggregated values. WITH is used to introduce aggregates which can then be used in predicates in WHERE.
  • to separate reading from updating of the graph.

3.5.2 Filter on aggregate function results

MATCH (david { name: 'David' })--(otherPerson)-->()
WITH otherPerson, count(*) AS foaf
WHERE foaf > 1
RETURN otherPerson.name

return "Anders"

3.5.3 Sort results before using collect on them

MATCH (n)
WITH n
ORDER BY n.name DESC LIMIT 3
RETURN collect(n.name)

return ["George","David","Ceasar"]

3.5.4. Limit branching of a path search

MATCH (n { name: 'Anders' })--(m)
WITH m
ORDER BY m.name DESC LIMIT 1
MATCH (m)--(o)
RETURN o.name

return

"Bossman"
"Anders"

3.6 UNWIND

Read Later

3.7 WHERE

3.7.1 Introduction

In the case of WITH and START, WHERE simply filters the results.
For MATCH and OPTIONAL MATCH on the other hand, WHERE adds constraints to the patterns described. It should not be seen as a filter after the matching is finished.

image.png

3.7.2 Basic usage

Too simple, most part omitted.

3.7.2.2 Filter on node label

To filter nodes by label, write a label predicate after the WHERE keyword using WHERE n:foo.

MATCH (n)
WHERE n:Swedish
RETURN n.name, n.age

3.7.2.6. Property existence checking

Use the exists() function to only include nodes or relationships in which a property exists.

MATCH (n)
WHERE exists(n.belt)
RETURN n.name, n.belt

3.7.3 String matching

3.7.3.1. Prefix string search using STARTS WITH

MATCH (n)
WHERE n.name STARTS WITH 'Pet'
RETURN n.name, n.age

3.7.3.2. Suffix string search using ENDS WITH

MATCH (n)
WHERE n.name ENDS WITH 'ter'
RETURN n.name, n.age

3.7.3.3. Substring search using CONTAINS

MATCH (n)
WHERE n.name CONTAINS 'ete'
RETURN n.name, n.age

3.7.3.4. String matching negation

use the NOT keyword to exclude all matches on given string

MATCH (n)
WHERE NOT n.name ENDS WITH 'y'
RETURN n.name, n.age

3.7.4 Regular expressoiins

=~

3.7.5 Using path patterns in WHERE

3.7.5.1 Filter on patterns

MATCH (timothy { name: 'Timothy' }),(others)
WHERE others.name IN ['Andy', 'Peter'] AND (timothy)<--(others)
RETURN others.name, others.age

return "Andy" 36

3.7.5.2 using NOT

3.7.5.3 Filter on patterns with properties

MATCH (n)
WHERE (n)-[:KNOWS]-({ name: 'Timothy' })
RETURN n.name, n.age

return "Andy" 36

3.7.5.4. Filter on relationship type

MATCH (n)-[r]->()
WHERE n.name='Andy' AND type(r)=~ 'K.*'
RETURN type(r), r.since

3.7.6 Lists

MATCH (a)
WHERE a.name IN ['Peter', 'Timothy']
RETURN a.name, a.age
"Timothy"  25
"Peter"  35

3.7.7 Missing properties and values

Read Later

3.7.8 Using ranges

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