Maps¶
The map is a composite data type. Maps are unordered collections of key-value pairs. In maps, the key is a string. The value can have any data type. You can get the map element by using map['key']
.
A map starts with a left curly bracket {
and ends with a right curly bracket }
. A map contains zero, one, or more key-value pairs. Map elements are separated from each other with commas (,
). Whitespace around elements is ignored in the map, thus line breaks, tab stops, and blanks can be used for formatting.
OpenCypher compatibility¶
- A composite data type (i.e. set, map, and list) CANNOT be stored as properties of vertices or edges.
- Map projection is not supported.
Examples¶
# The following query returns the simple map.
nebula> YIELD map{key1: 'Value1', Key2: 'Value2'} as a;
+----------------------------------+
| a |
+----------------------------------+
| {Key2: "Value2", key1: "Value1"} |
+----------------------------------+
# The following query returns the list type map.
nebula> YIELD map{listKey: [{inner: 'Map1'}, {inner: 'Map2'}]} as a;
+-----------------------------------------------+
| a |
+-----------------------------------------------+
| {listKey: [{inner: "Map1"}, {inner: "Map2"}]} |
+-----------------------------------------------+
# The following query returns the hybrid type map.
nebula> RETURN map{a: LIST[1,2], b: SET{1,2,1}, c: "hee"} as a;
+----------------------------------+
| a |
+----------------------------------+
| {a: [1, 2], b: {2, 1}, c: "hee"} |
+----------------------------------+
# The following query returns the specified element in a map.
nebula> RETURN map{a: LIST[1,2], b: SET{1,2,1}, c: "hee"}["b"] AS b;
+--------+
| b |
+--------+
| {2, 1} |
+--------+
# The following query checks whether the map has the specified key, not support checks whether the map has the specified value yet.
nebula> RETURN "a" IN MAP{a:1, b:2} AS a;
+------+
| a |
+------+
| true |
+------+
Last update:
January 14, 2022