Reputation: 6281
Any rule of thumb on where to use label vs node property vs relationship + node.
Let's have an example, say I have a store and I want to put my products in neo4j. Their identifier is the product sku, and I also want to have a categorization on them like this one is for clothes, food, electronics, and you get the idea. I'll be having a free search on my graph, like the user can search anything, and I'd return all the things related to that search string.
Would it be better to use:
sku 001
, and I'll tag it a label of Food
.sku 001
, and have property on this node called category:"Food"
sku 001
, and I'll create another node for the Food
, and will create a relationship of "category
" to relate them.I have read that if you'll be looking up a property, it's better off as a relationship + node, as traversing is much faster than looking up properties of node.
TIA
Upvotes: 55
Views: 11872
Reputation: 1672
This blog post may also be helpful because of the benchmark it contains.
I modelled the ‘relationship’ in 4 different ways…
- Using a specific relationship type
(node)-[:HAS_ADDRESS]->(address)
- Using a generic relationship type and then filtering by end node label
(node)-[:HAS]->(address:Address)
- Using a generic relationship type and then filtering by relationship property
(node)-[:HAS {type:“address”}]->(address)
- Using a generic relationship type and then filtering by end node property
(node)-[:HAS]->(address {type: “address”})
<...>
So in summary…specific relationships #ftw!
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 2051
Whether you should use a property, a label or a node for the category depends on how you will be querying the data.
(I'll assume here that you have a fairly small, fairly fixed set of categories.)
Use a property if you won't be querying by category, but just need to return the category of a node that has been found by other means. (For example: what is the category of the item with sku 001
?)
Use a label if you need to query by category. (For example: what are all the foods costing less than $10?)
Use a node if you need to traverse the category without knowing what it is. (For example: what are the ten most popular items in the same category as one that the user has chosen?)
Upvotes: 73