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  2. Graph database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_database

    Graph databases are a powerful tool for graph-like queries. For example, computing the shortest path between two nodes in the graph. Other graph-like queries can be performed over a graph database in a natural way (for example graph's diameter computations or community detection).

  3. List of in-memory databases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_in-memory_databases

    ArangoDB is a transactional native multi-model database supporting two major NoSQL data models (graph and document [1]) with one query language. Written in C++ and optimized for in-memory computing. In addition ArangoDB integrated RocksDB for persistent storage. ArangoDB supports Java, JavaScript, Python, PHP, NodeJS, C++ and Elixir.

  4. TerminusDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TerminusDB

    TerminusDB is an open source knowledge graph and document store. It is used to build versioned data products. It is a native revision control database that is architecturally similar to Git. It is listed on DB-Engines. TerminusDB provides a document API for building via the JSON exchange format. It implements both GraphQL and a datalog variant ...

  5. Cypher (query language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypher_(query_language)

    The RDF model has been standardized by W3C in a number of specifications. The Property Graph model, on the other hand, has a multitude of implementations in graph databases, graph algorithms, and graph processing facilities. However, a common, standardized query language for property graphs (like SQL for relational database systems) is missing.

  6. Gremlin (query language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gremlin_(query_language)

    The following examples of Gremlin queries and responses in a Gremlin-Groovy environment are relative to a graph representation of the MovieLens dataset. [4] The dataset includes users who rate movies. Users each have one occupation, and each movie has one or more categories associated with it. The MovieLens graph schema is detailed below.

  7. Resource Description Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework

    For example, one way to represent the notion "The sky has the color blue" in RDF is as the triple: a subject denoting "the sky", a predicate denoting "has the color", and an object denoting "blue". Therefore, RDF uses subject instead of object (or entity ) in contrast to the typical approach of an entity–attribute–value model in object ...

  8. Graph Modelling Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_Modelling_Language

    Graph-tool, a free Python module for manipulation and statistical analysis of graphs. NetworkX, an open source Python library for studying complex graphs. Tulip (software) is a free software in the domain of information visualisation capable of manipulating huge graphs (with more than 1.000.000 elements).

  9. Zope Object Database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zope_Object_Database

    ZODB stores Python objects using an extended version of Python's built-in object persistence (pickle). A ZODB database has a single root object (normally a dictionary), which is the only object directly made accessible by the database. All other objects stored in the database are reached through the root object.