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You're reading from  Learning Neo4j 3.x - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2017
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781786466143
Edition2nd Edition
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Jerome Baton
Jerome Baton
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Jerome Baton

Jérôme Baton started hacking computers at the age of skin problems, gaming first then continued his trip by self-learning Basic on Amstrad CPC, peaking on coding a full screen horizontal starfield, and messing the interlace of the video controller so that sprites appeared twice as high in horizontal beat'em up games. Disks were three inches for 178 Kb then. Then, for gaming reasons, he switched to Commodore Amiga and its fantastic AMOS Basic. Later caught by seriousness and studies, he wrote Turbo Pascal, C, COBOL, Visual C++, and Java on PCs and mainframes at university, and even Logo in high school. Then, Java happened and he became a consultant, mostly on backend code of websites in many different businesses. Jérôme authored several articles in French on Neo4j, JBoss Forge, an Arduino workshop for Devoxx4Kids, and reviewed kilos of books on Android. He has a weakness for wordplay, puns, spoonerisms, and Neo4j that relieves him from join(t) pains. Jérôme also has the joy to teach in French universities, currently at I.U.T de Paris, Université Paris V - René Descartes (Neo4j, Android), and Université de Troyes (Neo4j), where he does his best to enterTRain the students. When not programming, Jérôme enjoys photography, doing electronics, everything DIY, understanding how things work, trying to be clever or funny on Twitter, and spends a lot of time trying to understand his kids and life in general.
Read more about Jerome Baton

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Neo4j spatial


Neo4j Spatial (later NS) is a plugin, like APOC, discussed in Chapter 5, Awesome Procedures on Cypher - APOC. The homepage of this plugin is https://github.com/neo4j-contrib/spatial.

Just like APOC, you should take care to install a version compatible with the version of your Neo4j server. See the releases tab on their GitHub landing page. The release notes and the release filenames are self-explanatory. (Thank the project leader, Craig Taverner.)

Online demo

William Lyon (https://twitter.com/lyonwj) from Neo4j has made an online demo available at this address, http://www.lyonwj.com/scdemo/index.html.

Use the polygon tool in the toolbar on the left to define a shape, double-click inside it, and you will get markers on the map to indicate restaurant locations. Let's find some restaurants in Phoenix, in an almost successfully drawn butterfly shape:

  Restaurant butterfly

While we are in the lexical field of food, let's say the demo was an amuse-bouche (appetizers) or a starter, and...

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Learning Neo4j 3.x - Second Edition
Published in: Oct 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781786466143

Author (1)

author image
Jerome Baton

Jérôme Baton started hacking computers at the age of skin problems, gaming first then continued his trip by self-learning Basic on Amstrad CPC, peaking on coding a full screen horizontal starfield, and messing the interlace of the video controller so that sprites appeared twice as high in horizontal beat'em up games. Disks were three inches for 178 Kb then. Then, for gaming reasons, he switched to Commodore Amiga and its fantastic AMOS Basic. Later caught by seriousness and studies, he wrote Turbo Pascal, C, COBOL, Visual C++, and Java on PCs and mainframes at university, and even Logo in high school. Then, Java happened and he became a consultant, mostly on backend code of websites in many different businesses. Jérôme authored several articles in French on Neo4j, JBoss Forge, an Arduino workshop for Devoxx4Kids, and reviewed kilos of books on Android. He has a weakness for wordplay, puns, spoonerisms, and Neo4j that relieves him from join(t) pains. Jérôme also has the joy to teach in French universities, currently at I.U.T de Paris, Université Paris V - René Descartes (Neo4j, Android), and Université de Troyes (Neo4j), where he does his best to enterTRain the students. When not programming, Jérôme enjoys photography, doing electronics, everything DIY, understanding how things work, trying to be clever or funny on Twitter, and spends a lot of time trying to understand his kids and life in general.
Read more about Jerome Baton