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Here is how they are evolving, with vendors and standard bodies listening, and platforms becoming fluent in many query languages Written by George Anadiotis, Contributor Jan. 30, 2020, 7:11 a.m. PT ...
There are several graph database languages on the market, including Neo4j’s Cypher, Google Cayley, TIBCO, Apache TinkerPop Gremlin, Amazon’s Neptune and TigerGraph’s GSQL, to name a few.
The graph query languages can offer a concise way to search for particular combinations of entries that fit specific patterns. Some questions, however well-specified, can be difficult to answer in ...
Training programs, including specialized training on graph query languages like Cypher, Gremlin or SPARQL as well as hands-on workshops and labs are common ways of upskilling teams to prepare for ...
GQL is expected to unite multiple versions of graph query languages that are already in the market. Neo4j’s Cypher is the most widely used.
SQL has dominated data querying for decades. Newer query languages offer more elegance, simplicity, and flexibility for modern use cases. For the last three decades, databases and Structured Query ...
That’s the motivation behind the GQL manifesto, created by Alastair Green, who works on graph query languages at the graph technology company Neo4j, which I’ve profiled before and whose ...
Neo Technology Inc. made a lot of new friends in the open-source ecosystem this morning after releasing the query language powering its hugely popular graph store under an open-source license.
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