The scenario is this: I have an ArangoDB collection containing items, and another collection containing tags. I am using a graph, and I have an edge collection called "Contains" connecting the items and tags. An item has multiple tags.
Now I am trying to do a search for items containing multiple tags. E.g. items containing the tags "photography", "portrait" and "faces".
My general approach is to start a graph traversal from each of the tag vertices and find the items that relate to that tag. That part works fine. I get a list of items.
But the last part of my task is to make an intersection of all the lists in order to find the items that contain ALL the tags specified. And I cannot work out how to do this.
What I wanted to do was something like this:
let tagnames = SPLIT(@tagnames,',')
let tagcollections = (
FOR tagname IN tagnames
LET atag = (FOR t IN tags FILTER LOWER(t.text)==LOWER(tagname) RETURN t)
let collections = (FOR v IN 1..1 INBOUND atag[0] Contains RETURN v)
RETURN { tag: atag, collections: collections }
)
RETURN INTERSECTION(tagcollections)
However, it doesn't work: The INTERSECTION function does not work on a single list, but on multiple items, like this: INTERSECTION(listA, listB, listC...).
How can I make an intersection of the lists found in the FOR .. RETURN block?
BOOST() Override boost in the context of a search expression with a specified value, making it available for scorer functions.
The REMOVE keyword can be used to remove documents from a collection. Each REMOVE operation is restricted to a single collection, and the collection name must not be dynamic.
ArangoDB 3.0 introduced special array comparison operators (ANY
, ALL
, NONE
). ALL IN
can be used to test if every element in the left-hand side array are also in the right-hand side array:
[ "red", "green", "blue" ] ALL IN [ "purple", "red", "blue", "green" ]
// true
Note that these operators can not use indexes yet. Given a data model that embeds the tags directly into the documents, a workaround is to use an index to find all documents that contain one of the tags (e.g. take the first element, ["red","green","blue"][0]
) to reduce the result set without a full collection scan, then post-filter with ALL IN
if the other tags are also in the list:
LET tagsToSearchFor = [ "red", "green", "blue" ]
FOR doc IN coll
FILTER tagsToSearchFor[0] IN doc.tags[*] // array index
FILTER tagsToSeachFor ALL IN doc.tags
RETURN doc
ALL IN
can also be used for your data model with a separate collection for tags, but you will not be able to make use of an index like above. For instance:
FOR doc IN documents
LET tags = (
FOR v IN INBOUND doc contains
RETURN v._key
)
FILTER ["red", "green", "blue"] ALL IN tags
RETURN MERGE(doc, {tags})
Or if you want to start the traversal with the tags and use an intersection-based approach:
LET startTags = ["red", "green", "blue"] // must exist
LET ids = (
FOR startTag IN DOCUMENT("tags", startTags)
RETURN (
FOR v IN OUTBOUND startTag contains
RETURN v._id
)
)
LET docs = APPLY("INTERSECTION", ids)
FOR doc IN DOCUMENT(docs)
RETURN MERGE(doc, {
tags: (FOR tag IN INBOUND doc contains RETURN tag._key)
})
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