Btw, will post a local server build and the plugin to dropbox so you can get on with it in a while ... WDYT?
Cheers, /peter neubauer GTalk: neubauer.peter Skype peter.neubauer Phone +46 704 106975 LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/neubauer Twitter http://twitter.com/peterneubauer http://www.neo4j.org - Your high performance graph database. http://startupbootcamp.org/ - Ă–resund - Innovation happens HERE. http://www.thoughtmade.com - Scandinavia's coolest Bring-a-Thing party. On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 9:41 PM, Peter Neubauer < peter.neuba...@neotechnology.com> wrote: > Marcelo, > you can use the graphmatching libs through a custom extension, see > http://docs.neo4j.org/chunked/snapshot/server-plugins.html . Also, > Ggremlin is accessible through REST using the Neo4j Gremlin Plugin, soon to > be packaged as a standard plugin, see > https://github.com/peterneubauer/neo4j-gremlin-plugin > > Once you have done your graphmatching plugin (keep us updated on that > progress) or the Gremlin plugin, you should be able to use neography to > point to that URIs. > > Does that help? > > Cheers, > > /peter neubauer > > GTalk: neubauer.peter > Skype peter.neubauer > Phone +46 704 106975 > LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/neubauer > Twitter http://twitter.com/peterneubauer > > http://www.neo4j.org - Your high performance graph database. > http://startupbootcamp.org/ - Ă–resund - Innovation happens HERE. > http://www.thoughtmade.com - Scandinavia's coolest Bring-a-Thing party. > > > > On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 9:37 PM, Marcelo Barbudas <nos...@gmail.com>wrote: > >> Hey Jim, >> > >> > This list is pretty friendly, and since Neo4j is quite new itself we're >> all newbies one way or another :-) >> > >> Thanks for making me feel welcome. >> >> >> What's the best way to find commonalities between two people (based on >> >> likes)? Is it possible to put a weight on the like relationship? Like >> >> for example if someone likes fish a lot more than bread. >> > >> > Using a weighted graph is a pretty sensible idea here. But if you're >> looking for patterns in a graph (people who like fish and chips, and who >> like ice-cream) you might also consider using the graph-matching library: >> > >> > https://github.com/neo4j/graph-matching/ >> > >> > In the MVN repo (ivy): >> > >> > <dependency org="org.neo4j" name="neo4j-graph-matching" rev="0.8"/> >> > >> Is it possible to use this with the REST server and the ruby 'neography' >> wrapper? >> >> -M. >> _______________________________________________ >> Neo4j mailing list >> User@lists.neo4j.org >> https://lists.neo4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user >> > > _______________________________________________ Neo4j mailing list User@lists.neo4j.org https://lists.neo4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user