Head's Up! These forums are read-only. All users and content have migrated. Please join us at community.neo4j.com.
12-01-2018 11:56 AM
I'm trying to demonstrate neo4j capacities for scientists (from nuclear physic to human sciences).
These people heavily use python, so I try to use py2neo to show the potential.
It works, but there's serious bugs. The github project is asleep, there's no commit from august and a lot of issues.
So the question is :is it py2neo dead ?
I know this is a open source project, based on contribution, and everybody make its best. Thanks to Nigel Small to have created py2neo, it's an impressive work.
Could I recommend py2neo to be a solid tool for scientist ?
Thanks
12-01-2018 12:10 PM
It's not dead, it's just resting.
I don't get a great deal of time to work on it these days but the project is still alive as far as I'm concerned.
12-01-2018 12:29 PM
Happy to read it
If you have time ( Yeap, I just leaved the Christmas buffet for my kids, I'm still in the Santa spirit 🙂 ) could you take a look to https://github.com/technige/py2neo/issues/705, you'll save my day.
I fought with the bare neo4j python driver, and since I love py2neo stronger.
Good evening
12-01-2018 12:32 PM
Yup.
It looks like the highest priority problem to fix is my having broken the requirements/setup in the last release. I foolishly merged in an experimental branch that brought in requirements for ipython/jupyter and has broken all the things.
I'll look at this as well as your problem over the coming week.
12-02-2018 10:17 AM
Hi Nigel.
Thanks for the new 4.1.2 🙂
Good evening
Marc.
All the sessions of the conference are now available online