“Full Stack GraphQL Applications,” a book by William Lyon, is hot off the presses in both print and ebook formats from Manning Publications. This book shows you how to develop full stack GraphQL applications using GraphQL, React, Apollo, and Neo4j database as well as how to deploy our application using modern cloud services such as Neo4j Aura, Auth0, Netlify, and AWS Lambda.
Along the way, we demonstrate how to use the Neo4j GraphQL library to build a GraphQL API without writing any resolvers, add custom logic using Cypher to your GraphQL server, and add authorization rules to protect your data. You can download a FREE digital copy of the full book here.
Don’t forget to code and golf before September 15! Neo4j Code Golf challenge is your chance to win prizes totaling $27,000!!
Cheers,
Yolande Poirier
PS: Stay tuned for NODES 2022 news! We’ll be announcing the agenda soon. We received a lot of great talks and thanks to everyone who submitted! NODES is on November 16 and 17, 2022. Save your seat.
Charchit Kapoor is a full-stack developer who has worked with a variety of languages, frameworks, and databases (both relational and NoSQL), and enjoys sharing and learning about technology. He has developed a proficiency in Java, TypeScript, NodeJS, ReactJS, NestJS, MySQL, MongoDB, and Neo4j and has experience using all them in a microservices-based setup. Charchit has been helping a lot of users solve their technical issues, and we all thank him for it. Follow him on LinkedIn.
In this blog, Ben Goosman demonstrates how graph visualization keeps track of his company’s complex relationships as managed in Jira, Airtable, and Confluence. He creates custom workflows for GraphXR using the Grove extension to map JSON onto nodes and edges and then inserts them into a graph database.
In this post, Tom Nijhof follows up his previous article linking different synonyms of the same chemical compounds to each other. Here, he describes connecting the compounds from the U.S. National Cancer Institute to the rest of the database, and a method to continually update the data.
Valerio Piccioni creates a pipeline that translates English language phrases into Cypher queries, accessing the APIs of various speech-to-text services with a Python library. He is using a deep learning tuned model of wav2vec2 that outputs the query text and a PLY yacc parser to produce the equivalent Cypher query.
Vlad Batushkov announces the first episode of Graphville, an educational platform for engineers learning graph theory, Neo4j, and Cypher. In short and entertaining chapters, you will begin a journey into the structural elements of a Neo4j graph, pattern matching, and the basics of the Cypher query language.
Thanks! after inevitable data format reformating hunt from ancient Google format @WolframResearch and Mathematica came to the rescue.
The Romans certainly seemed to like the Welsh borders. Time to think up some good student graph theory projects using @neo4j .. https://t.co/Ks12pwE0otpic.twitter.com/nR7P362Zrw
Yolande Poirier is passionate about technology and developer communities. Her goal is to empower developers and data scientists everywhere to successfully grow their projects. At Neo4j, she runs the advocacy programs, including the Ninja program. Feel free to reach out to her on LinkedIn.