Table of Contents
This chapter discusses the rules for writing the following elements of SQL statements when using MySQL:
Literal values such as strings and numbers
Identifiers such as database, table, and column names
Keywords and reserved words
User-defined and system variables
Comments
This section describes how to write literal values in MySQL. These
include strings, numbers, hexadecimal and bit values, boolean
values, and NULL
. The section also covers
various nuances that you may encounter when dealing with these
basic types in MySQL.
A string is a sequence of bytes or characters, enclosed within
either single quote ('
) or double quote
("
) characters. Examples:
'a string' "another string"
Quoted strings placed next to each other are concatenated to a single string. The following lines are equivalent:
'a string' 'a' ' ' 'string'
If the ANSI_QUOTES
SQL mode is
enabled, string literals can be quoted only within single
quotation marks because a string quoted within double quotation
marks is interpreted as an identifier.
A binary string is a
string of bytes. Every binary string has a character set and
collation named binary
. A
nonbinary string is a
string of characters. It has a character set other than
binary
and a collation that is compatible
with the character set.
For both types of strings, comparisons are based on the numeric values of the string unit. For binary strings, the unit is the byte; comparisons use numeric byte values. For nonbinary strings, the unit is the character and some character sets support multibyte characters; comparisons use numeric character code values. Character code ordering is a function of the string collation. (For more information, see Section 10.8.5, “The binary Collation Compared to _bin Collations”.)
A character string literal may have an optional character set
introducer and COLLATE
clause, to designate
it as a string that uses a particular character set and
collation:
[_charset_name
]'string
' [COLLATEcollation_name
]
Examples:
SELECT _latin1'string
'; SELECT _binary'string
'; SELECT _utf8'string
' COLLATE utf8_danish_ci;
You can use
N'
(or
literal
'n'
) to
create a string in the national character set. These statements
are equivalent:
literal
'
SELECT N'some text'; SELECT n'some text'; SELECT _utf8'some text';
For information about these forms of string syntax, see Section 10.3.7, “The National Character Set”, and Section 10.3.8, “Character Set Introducers”.
Within a string, certain sequences have special meaning unless
the NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES
SQL
mode is enabled. Each of these sequences begins with a backslash
(\
), known as the escape
character. MySQL recognizes the escape sequences
shown in Table 9.1, “Special Character Escape Sequences”. For all
other escape sequences, backslash is ignored. That is, the
escaped character is interpreted as if it was not escaped. For
example, \x
is just x
.
These sequences are case-sensitive. For example,
\b
is interpreted as a backspace, but
\B
is interpreted as B
.
Escape processing is done according to the character set
indicated by the
character_set_connection
system
variable. This is true even for strings that are preceded by an
introducer that indicates a different character set, as
discussed in Section 10.3.6, “Character String Literal Character Set and Collation”.
Table 9.1 Special Character Escape Sequences
The ASCII 26 character can be encoded as \Z
to enable you to work around the problem that ASCII 26 stands
for END-OF-FILE on Windows. ASCII 26 within a file causes
problems if you try to use mysql
.
db_name
<
file_name
The \%
and \_
sequences
are used to search for literal instances of %
and _
in pattern-matching contexts where they
would otherwise be interpreted as wildcard characters. See the
description of the LIKE
operator in
Section 12.7.1, “String Comparison Functions and Operators”. If you use
\%
or \_
outside of
pattern-matching contexts, they evaluate to the strings
\%
and \_
, not to
%
and _
.
There are several ways to include quote characters within a string:
A '
inside a string quoted with
'
may be written as
''
.
A "
inside a string quoted with
"
may be written as
""
.
Precede the quote character by an escape character
(\
).
A '
inside a string quoted with
"
needs no special treatment and need not
be doubled or escaped. In the same way, "
inside a string quoted with '
needs no
special treatment.
The following SELECT
statements
demonstrate how quoting and escaping work:
mysql>SELECT 'hello', '"hello"', '""hello""', 'hel''lo', '\'hello';
+-------+---------+-----------+--------+--------+ | hello | "hello" | ""hello"" | hel'lo | 'hello | +-------+---------+-----------+--------+--------+ mysql>SELECT "hello", "'hello'", "''hello''", "hel""lo", "\"hello";
+-------+---------+-----------+--------+--------+ | hello | 'hello' | ''hello'' | hel"lo | "hello | +-------+---------+-----------+--------+--------+ mysql>SELECT 'This\nIs\nFour\nLines';
+--------------------+ | This Is Four Lines | +--------------------+ mysql>SELECT 'disappearing\ backslash';
+------------------------+ | disappearing backslash | +------------------------+
To insert binary data into a string column (such as a
BLOB
column), you should
represent certain characters by escape sequences. Backslash
(\
) and the quote character used to quote the
string must be escaped. In certain client environments, it may
also be necessary to escape NUL
or Control+Z.
The mysql client truncates quoted strings
containing NUL
characters if they are not
escaped, and Control+Z may be taken for END-OF-FILE on Windows
if not escaped. For the escape sequences that represent each of
these characters, see
Table 9.1, “Special Character Escape Sequences”.
When writing application programs, any string that might contain any of these special characters must be properly escaped before the string is used as a data value in an SQL statement that is sent to the MySQL server. You can do this in two ways:
Process the string with a function that escapes the special
characters. In a C program, you can use the
mysql_real_escape_string()
C
API function to escape characters. See
Section 23.7.6.54, “mysql_real_escape_string()”. Within SQL
statements that construct other SQL statements, you can use
the QUOTE()
function. The
Perl DBI interface provides a quote
method to convert special characters to the proper escape
sequences. See Section 23.9, “MySQL Perl API”. Other language
interfaces may provide a similar capability.
As an alternative to explicitly escaping special characters, many MySQL APIs provide a placeholder capability that enables you to insert special markers into a statement string, and then bind data values to them when you issue the statement. In this case, the API takes care of escaping special characters in the values for you.
Number literals include exact-value (integer and
DECIMAL
) literals and
approximate-value (floating-point) literals.
Integers are represented as a sequence of digits. Numbers may
include .
as a decimal separator. Numbers may
be preceded by -
or +
to
indicate a negative or positive value, respectively. Numbers
represented in scientific notation with a mantissa and exponent
are approximate-value numbers.
Exact-value numeric literals have an integer part or fractional
part, or both. They may be signed. Examples:
1
, .2
,
3.4
, -5
,
-6.78
, +9.10
.
Approximate-value numeric literals are represented in scientific
notation with a mantissa and exponent. Either or both parts may
be signed. Examples: 1.2E3
,
1.2E-3
, -1.2E3
,
-1.2E-3
.
Two numbers that look similar may be treated differently. For
example, 2.34
is an exact-value (fixed-point)
number, whereas 2.34E0
is an
approximate-value (floating-point) number.
The DECIMAL
data type is a
fixed-point type and calculations are exact. In MySQL, the
DECIMAL
type has several
synonyms: NUMERIC
,
DEC
,
FIXED
. The integer types also are
exact-value types. For more information about exact-value
calculations, see Section 12.21, “Precision Math”.
The FLOAT
and
DOUBLE
data types are
floating-point types and calculations are approximate. In MySQL,
types that are synonymous with
FLOAT
or
DOUBLE
are
DOUBLE PRECISION
and
REAL
.
An integer may be used in floating-point context; it is interpreted as the equivalent floating-point number.
Date and time values can be represented in several formats, such
as quoted strings or as numbers, depending on the exact type of
the value and other factors. For example, in contexts where
MySQL expects a date, it interprets any of
'2015-07-21'
, '20150721'
,
and 20150721
as a date.
This section describes the acceptable formats for date and time literals. For more information about the temporal data types, such as the range of permitted values, see Section 11.2, “Date and Time Data Types”.
Standard SQL and ODBC Date and Time Literals. Standard SQL permits temporal literals to be specified using a type keyword and a string. The space between the keyword and string is optional.
DATE 'str
' TIME 'str
' TIMESTAMP 'str
'
MySQL recognizes those constructions and also the corresponding ODBC syntax:
{ d 'str
' } { t 'str
' } { ts 'str
' }
Before MySQL 5.6.4, MySQL ignores the type keyword and each of
the preceding constructions produces the string value
'
, with a type
of str
'VARCHAR
.
As of 5.6.4, MySQL uses the type keyword and these constructions
produce DATE
,
TIME
, and
DATETIME
values, respectively,
including a trailing fractional seconds part if specified. The
TIMESTAMP
syntax produces a
DATETIME
value in MySQL because
DATETIME
has a range that more
closely corresponds to the standard SQL
TIMESTAMP
type, which has a year
range from 0001
to 9999
.
(The MySQL TIMESTAMP
year range
is 1970
to 2038
.)
String and Numeric Literals in Date and Time Context.
MySQL recognizes DATE
values in
these formats:
As a string in either
'
or YYYY-MM-DD
''
format. A “relaxed” syntax is permitted: Any
punctuation character may be used as the delimiter between
date parts. For example, YY-MM-DD
''2012-12-31'
,
'2012/12/31'
,
'2012^12^31'
, and
'2012@12@31'
are equivalent.
As a string with no delimiters in either
'
or
YYYYMMDD
''
format, provided that the string makes sense as a date. For
example, YYMMDD
''20070523'
and
'070523'
are interpreted as
'2007-05-23'
, but
'071332'
is illegal (it has nonsensical
month and day parts) and becomes
'0000-00-00'
.
As a number in either YYYYMMDD
or
YYMMDD
format, provided that the
number makes sense as a date. For example,
19830905
and 830905
are interpreted as '1983-09-05'
.
MySQL recognizes DATETIME
and
TIMESTAMP
values in these
formats:
As a string in either '
or
YYYY-MM-DD
hh:mm:ss
''
format. A
“relaxed” syntax is permitted here, too: Any
punctuation character may be used as the delimiter between
date parts or time parts. For example, YY-MM-DD
hh:mm:ss
''2012-12-31
11:30:45'
, '2012^12^31
11+30+45'
, '2012/12/31
11*30*45'
, and '2012@12@31
11^30^45'
are equivalent.
The only delimiter recognized between a date and time part and a fractional seconds part is the decimal point.
The date and time parts can be separated by
T
rather than a space. For example,
'2012-12-31 11:30:45'
'2012-12-31T11:30:45'
are equivalent.
As a string with no delimiters in either
'
or
YYYYMMDDhhmmss
''
format, provided that the string makes sense as a date. For
example, YYMMDDhhmmss
''20070523091528'
and
'070523091528'
are interpreted as
'2007-05-23 09:15:28'
, but
'071122129015'
is illegal (it has a
nonsensical minute part) and becomes '0000-00-00
00:00:00'
.
As a number in either
YYYYMMDDhhmmss
or
YYMMDDhhmmss
format, provided
that the number makes sense as a date. For example,
19830905132800
and
830905132800
are interpreted as
'1983-09-05 13:28:00'
.
A DATETIME
or
TIMESTAMP
value can include a
trailing fractional seconds part in up to microseconds (6
digits) precision. The fractional part should always be
separated from the rest of the time by a decimal point; no other
fractional seconds delimiter is recognized. For information
about fractional seconds support in MySQL, see
Section 11.2.7, “Fractional Seconds in Time Values”.
Dates containing two-digit year values are ambiguous because the century is unknown. MySQL interprets two-digit year values using these rules:
Year values in the range 70-99
become
1970-1999
.
Year values in the range 00-69
become
2000-2069
.
See also Section 11.2.9, “2-Digit Years in Dates”.
For values specified as strings that include date part
delimiters, it is unnecessary to specify two digits for month or
day values that are less than 10
.
'2015-6-9'
is the same as
'2015-06-09'
. Similarly, for values specified
as strings that include time part delimiters, it is unnecessary
to specify two digits for hour, minute, or second values that
are less than 10
. '2015-10-30
1:2:3'
is the same as '2015-10-30
01:02:03'
.
Values specified as numbers should be 6, 8, 12, or 14 digits
long. If a number is 8 or 14 digits long, it is assumed to be in
YYYYMMDD
or
YYYYMMDDhhmmss
format and that the
year is given by the first 4 digits. If the number is 6 or 12
digits long, it is assumed to be in
YYMMDD
or
YYMMDDhhmmss
format and that the year
is given by the first 2 digits. Numbers that are not one of
these lengths are interpreted as though padded with leading
zeros to the closest length.
Values specified as nondelimited strings are interpreted
according their length. For a string 8 or 14 characters long,
the year is assumed to be given by the first 4 characters.
Otherwise, the year is assumed to be given by the first 2
characters. The string is interpreted from left to right to find
year, month, day, hour, minute, and second values, for as many
parts as are present in the string. This means you should not
use strings that have fewer than 6 characters. For example, if
you specify '9903'
, thinking that represents
March, 1999, MySQL converts it to the “zero” date
value. This occurs because the year and month values are
99
and 03
, but the day
part is completely missing. However, you can explicitly specify
a value of zero to represent missing month or day parts. For
example, to insert the value '1999-03-00'
,
use '990300'
.
MySQL recognizes TIME
values in
these formats:
As a string in 'D hh:mm:ss'
format. You can also use one of the following
“relaxed” syntaxes:
'hh:mm:ss'
,
'hh:mm'
, 'D
hh:mm'
, 'D hh'
, or
'ss'
. Here
D
represents days and can have a
value from 0 to 34.
As a string with no delimiters in
'hhmmss'
format, provided that it
makes sense as a time. For example,
'101112'
is understood as
'10:11:12'
, but
'109712'
is illegal (it has a nonsensical
minute part) and becomes '00:00:00'
.
As a number in hhmmss
format,
provided that it makes sense as a time. For example,
101112
is understood as
'10:11:12'
. The following alternative
formats are also understood: ss
,
mmss
, or
hhmmss
.
A trailing fractional seconds part is recognized in the
'D hh:mm:ss.fraction'
,
'hh:mm:ss.fraction'
,
'hhmmss.fraction'
, and
hhmmss.fraction
time formats, where
fraction
is the fractional part in up to
microseconds (6 digits) precision. The fractional part should
always be separated from the rest of the time by a decimal
point; no other fractional seconds delimiter is recognized. For
information about fractional seconds support in MySQL, see
Section 11.2.7, “Fractional Seconds in Time Values”.
For TIME
values specified as
strings that include a time part delimiter, it is unnecessary to
specify two digits for hours, minutes, or seconds values that
are less than 10
. '8:3:2'
is the same as '08:03:02'
.
Hexadecimal literal values are written using
X'
or
val
'0x
notation,
where val
val
contains hexadecimal digits
(0..9
, A..F
). Lettercase
of the digits and of any leading X
does not
matter. A leading 0x
is case-sensitive and
cannot be written as 0X
.
Legal hexadecimal literals:
X'01AF' X'01af' x'01AF' x'01af' 0x01AF 0x01af
Illegal hexadecimal literals:
X'0G' (G is not a hexadecimal digit) 0X01AF (0X must be written as 0x)
Values written using
X'
notation
must contain an even number of digits or a syntax error occurs.
To correct the problem, pad the value with a leading zero:
val
'
mysql>SET @s = X'FFF';
ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'X'FFF'' mysql>SET @s = X'0FFF';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Values written using
0x
notation
that contain an odd number of digits are treated as having an
extra leading val
0
. For example,
0xaaa
is interpreted as
0x0aaa
.
By default, a hexadecimal literal is a binary string, where each pair of hexadecimal digits represents a character:
mysql>SELECT X'4D7953514C', CHARSET(X'4D7953514C');
+---------------+------------------------+ | X'4D7953514C' | CHARSET(X'4D7953514C') | +---------------+------------------------+ | MySQL | binary | +---------------+------------------------+ mysql>SELECT 0x5461626c65, CHARSET(0x5461626c65);
+--------------+-----------------------+ | 0x5461626c65 | CHARSET(0x5461626c65) | +--------------+-----------------------+ | Table | binary | +--------------+-----------------------+
A hexadecimal literal may have an optional character set
introducer and COLLATE
clause, to designate
it as a string that uses a particular character set and
collation:
[_charset_name
] X'val
' [COLLATEcollation_name
]
Examples:
SELECT _latin1 X'4D7953514C'; SELECT _utf8 0x4D7953514C COLLATE utf8_danish_ci;
The examples use
X'
notation,
but val
'0x
notation
permits introducers as well. For information about introducers,
see Section 10.3.8, “Character Set Introducers”.
val
In numeric contexts, MySQL treats a hexadecimal literal like a
BIGINT
(64-bit integer). To
ensure numeric treatment of a hexadecimal literal, use it in
numeric context. Ways to do this include adding 0 or using
CAST(... AS UNSIGNED)
. For
example, a hexadecimal literal assigned to a user-defined
variable is a binary string by default. To assign the value as a
number, use it in numeric context:
mysql>SET @v1 = X'41';
mysql>SET @v2 = X'41'+0;
mysql>SET @v3 = CAST(X'41' AS UNSIGNED);
mysql>SELECT @v1, @v2, @v3;
+------+------+------+ | @v1 | @v2 | @v3 | +------+------+------+ | A | 65 | 65 | +------+------+------+
An empty hexadecimal value (X''
) evaluates to
a zero-length binary string. Converted to a number, it produces
0:
mysql>SELECT CHARSET(X''), LENGTH(X'');
+--------------+-------------+ | CHARSET(X'') | LENGTH(X'') | +--------------+-------------+ | binary | 0 | +--------------+-------------+ mysql>SELECT X''+0;
+-------+ | X''+0 | +-------+ | 0 | +-------+
The X'
notation is based on standard SQL. The val
'0x
notation is based on ODBC, for which hexadecimal strings are
often used to supply values for
BLOB
columns.
To convert a string or a number to a string in hexadecimal
format, use the HEX()
function:
mysql>SELECT HEX('cat');
+------------+ | HEX('cat') | +------------+ | 636174 | +------------+ mysql>SELECT X'636174';
+-----------+ | X'636174' | +-----------+ | cat | +-----------+
Bit-value literals are written using
b'
or
val
'0b
notation.
val
val
is a binary value written using
zeros and ones. Lettercase of any leading b
does not matter. A leading 0b
is
case-sensitive and cannot be written as 0B
.
Legal bit-value literals:
b'01' B'01' 0b01
Illegal bit-value literals:
b'2' (2 is not a binary digit) 0B01 (0B must be written as 0b)
By default, a bit-value literal is a binary string:
mysql>SELECT b'1000001', CHARSET(b'1000001');
+------------+---------------------+ | b'1000001' | CHARSET(b'1000001') | +------------+---------------------+ | A | binary | +------------+---------------------+ mysql>SELECT 0b1100001, CHARSET(0b1100001);
+-----------+--------------------+ | 0b1100001 | CHARSET(0b1100001) | +-----------+--------------------+ | a | binary | +-----------+--------------------+
A bit-value literal may have an optional character set
introducer and COLLATE
clause, to designate
it as a string that uses a particular character set and
collation:
[_charset_name
] b'val
' [COLLATEcollation_name
]
Examples:
SELECT _latin1 b'1000001'; SELECT _utf8 0b1000001 COLLATE utf8_danish_ci;
The examples use
b'
notation,
but val
'0b
notation
permits introducers as well. For information about introducers,
see Section 10.3.8, “Character Set Introducers”.
val
In numeric contexts, MySQL treats a bit literal like an integer.
To ensure numeric treatment of a bit literal, use it in numeric
context. Ways to do this include adding 0 or using
CAST(... AS UNSIGNED)
. For
example, a bit literal assigned to a user-defined variable is a
binary string by default. To assign the value as a number, use
it in numeric context:
mysql>SET @v1 = b'1100001';
mysql>SET @v2 = b'1100001'+0;
mysql>SET @v3 = CAST(b'1100001' AS UNSIGNED);
mysql>SELECT @v1, @v2, @v3;
+------+------+------+ | @v1 | @v2 | @v3 | +------+------+------+ | a | 97 | 97 | +------+------+------+
An empty bit value (b''
) evaluates to a
zero-length binary string. Converted to a number, it produces 0:
mysql>SELECT CHARSET(b''), LENGTH(b'');
+--------------+-------------+ | CHARSET(b'') | LENGTH(b'') | +--------------+-------------+ | binary | 0 | +--------------+-------------+ mysql>SELECT b''+0;
+-------+ | b''+0 | +-------+ | 0 | +-------+
Bit-value notation is convenient for specifying values to be
assigned to BIT
columns:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t (b BIT(8));
mysql>INSERT INTO t SET b = b'11111111';
mysql>INSERT INTO t SET b = b'1010';
mysql>INSERT INTO t SET b = b'0101';
Bit values in result sets are returned as binary values, which
may not display well. To convert a bit value to printable form,
use it in numeric context or use a conversion function such as
BIN()
or
HEX()
. High-order 0 digits are
not displayed in the converted value.
mysql> SELECT b+0, BIN(b), OCT(b), HEX(b) FROM t;
+------+----------+--------+--------+
| b+0 | BIN(b) | OCT(b) | HEX(b) |
+------+----------+--------+--------+
| 255 | 11111111 | 377 | FF |
| 10 | 1010 | 12 | A |
| 5 | 101 | 5 | 5 |
+------+----------+--------+--------+
The constants TRUE
and
FALSE
evaluate to 1
and
0
, respectively. The constant names can be
written in any lettercase.
mysql> SELECT TRUE, true, FALSE, false;
-> 1, 1, 0, 0
The NULL
value means “no data.”
NULL
can be written in any lettercase. A
synonym is \N
(case-sensitive).
Be aware that the NULL
value is different
from values such as 0
for numeric types or
the empty string for string types. For more information, see
Section B.4.4.3, “Problems with NULL Values”.
For text file import or export operations performed with
LOAD DATA
or
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
, NULL
is represented by the
\N
sequence. See Section 13.2.6, “LOAD DATA Statement”.
For sorting with ORDER BY
,
NULL
values sort before other values for
ascending sorts, after other values for descending sorts.
Certain objects within MySQL, including database, table, index, column, alias, view, stored procedure, partition, tablespace, and other object names are known as identifiers. This section describes the permissible syntax for identifiers in MySQL. Section 9.2.1, “Identifier Length Limits”, indicates the maximum length of each type of identifier. Section 9.2.3, “Identifier Case Sensitivity”, describes which types of identifiers are case-sensitive and under what conditions.
An identifier may be quoted or unquoted. If an identifier contains special characters or is a reserved word, you must quote it whenever you refer to it. (Exception: A reserved word that follows a period in a qualified name must be an identifier, so it need not be quoted.) Reserved words are listed at Section 9.3, “Keywords and Reserved Words”.
Internally, identifiers are converted to and are stored as Unicode (UTF-8). The permissible Unicode characters in identifiers are those in the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP). Supplementary characters are not permitted. Identifiers thus may contain these characters:
Permitted characters in unquoted identifiers:
ASCII: [0-9,a-z,A-Z$_] (basic Latin letters, digits 0-9, dollar, underscore)
Extended: U+0080 .. U+FFFF
Permitted characters in quoted identifiers include the full Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP), except U+0000:
ASCII: U+0001 .. U+007F
Extended: U+0080 .. U+FFFF
ASCII NUL (U+0000) and supplementary characters (U+10000 and higher) are not permitted in quoted or unquoted identifiers.
Identifiers may begin with a digit but unless quoted may not consist solely of digits.
Database, table, and column names cannot end with space characters.
The identifier quote character is the backtick
(`
):
mysql> SELECT * FROM `select` WHERE `select`.id > 100;
If the ANSI_QUOTES
SQL mode is
enabled, it is also permissible to quote identifiers within double
quotation marks:
mysql>CREATE TABLE "test" (col INT);
ERROR 1064: You have an error in your SQL syntax... mysql>SET sql_mode='ANSI_QUOTES';
mysql>CREATE TABLE "test" (col INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
The ANSI_QUOTES
mode causes the
server to interpret double-quoted strings as identifiers.
Consequently, when this mode is enabled, string literals must be
enclosed within single quotation marks. They cannot be enclosed
within double quotation marks. The server SQL mode is controlled
as described in Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
Identifier quote characters can be included within an identifier
if you quote the identifier. If the character to be included
within the identifier is the same as that used to quote the
identifier itself, then you need to double the character. The
following statement creates a table named a`b
that contains a column named c"d
:
mysql> CREATE TABLE `a``b` (`c"d` INT);
In the select list of a query, a quoted column alias can be specified using identifier or string quoting characters:
mysql> SELECT 1 AS `one`, 2 AS 'two';
+-----+-----+
| one | two |
+-----+-----+
| 1 | 2 |
+-----+-----+
Elsewhere in the statement, quoted references to the alias must use identifier quoting or the reference is treated as a string literal.
It is recommended that you do not use names that begin with
or
M
e
,
where M
eN
M
and
N
are integers. For example, avoid
using 1e
as an identifier, because an
expression such as 1e+3
is ambiguous. Depending
on context, it might be interpreted as the expression 1e
+ 3
or as the number 1e+3
.
Be careful when using MD5()
to
produce table names because it can produce names in illegal or
ambiguous formats such as those just described.
A user variable cannot be used directly in an SQL statement as an identifier or as part of an identifier. See Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”, for more information and examples of workarounds.
Special characters in database and table names are encoded in the
corresponding file system names as described in
Section 9.2.4, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”. If you have databases or
tables from an older version of MySQL that contain special
characters and for which the underlying directory names or file
names have not been updated to use the new encoding, the server
displays their names with a prefix of
#mysql50#
. For information about referring to
such names or converting them to the newer encoding, see that
section.
The following table describes the maximum length for each type of identifier.
Identifier Type | Maximum Length (characters) |
---|---|
Database | 64 (NDB storage engine: 63) |
Table | 64 (NDB storage engine: 63) |
Column | 64 |
Index | 64 |
Constraint | 64 |
Stored Program | 64 |
View | 64 |
Tablespace | 64 |
Server | 64 |
Log File Group | 64 |
Alias | 256 (see exception following table) |
Compound Statement Label | 16 |
Aliases for column names in CREATE
VIEW
statements are checked against the maximum column
length of 64 characters (not the maximum alias length of 256
characters).
For constraint definitions that include no constraint name, the
server internally generates a name derived from the associated
table name. For example, internally generated foreign key
constraint names consist of the table name plus
_ibfk_
and a number. If the table name is
close to the length limit for constraint names, the additional
characters required for the constraint name may cause that name
to exceed the limit, resulting in an error.
Identifiers are stored using Unicode (UTF-8). This applies to
identifiers in table definitions that are stored in
.frm
files and to identifiers stored in the
grant tables in the mysql
database. The sizes
of the identifier string columns in the grant tables are
measured in characters. You can use multibyte characters without
reducing the number of characters permitted for values stored in
these columns.
NDB Cluster imposes a maximum length of 63 characters for names of databases and tables. See Section 18.1.7.5, “Limits Associated with Database Objects in NDB Cluster”.
Values such as user name and host names in MySQL account names are strings rather than identifiers. For information about the maximum length of such values as stored in grant tables, see Grant Table Scope Column Properties.
Object names may be unqualified or qualified. An unqualified name is permitted in contexts where interpretation of the name is unambiguous. A qualified name includes at least one qualifier to clarify the interpretive context by overriding a default context or providing missing context.
For example, this statement creates a table using the
unqualified name t1
:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT);
Because t1
includes no qualifier to specify a
database, the statement creates the table in the default
database. If there is no default database, an error occurs.
This statement creates a table using the qualified name
db1.t1
:
CREATE TABLE db1.t1 (i INT);
Because db1.t1
includes a database qualifier
db1
, the statement creates
t1
in the database named
db1
, regardless of the default database. The
qualifier must be specified if there is no
default database. The qualifier may be
specified if there is a default database, to specify a database
different from the default, or to make the database explicit if
the default is the same as the one specified.
Qualifiers have these characteristics:
An unqualified name consists of a single identifier. A qualified name consists of multiple identifiers.
The components of a multiple-part name must be separated by
period (.
) characters. The initial parts
of a multiple-part name act as qualifiers that affect the
context within which to interpret the final identifier.
The qualifier character is a separate token and need not be
contiguous with the associated identifiers. For example,
tbl_name.col_name
and
tbl_name . col_name
are
equivalent.
If any components of a multiple-part name require quoting,
quote them individually rather than quoting the name as a
whole. For example, write
`my-table`.`my-column`
, not
`my-table.my-column`
.
A reserved word that follows a period in a qualified name must be an identifier, so in that context it need not be quoted.
The syntax
means the table .tbl_name
tbl_name
in the
default database. This syntax is accepted for ODBC
compatibility because some ODBC programs prefix table names
with a .
character.
The permitted qualifiers for object names depend on the object type:
A database name is fully qualified and takes no qualifier:
CREATE DATABASE db1;
A table, view, or stored program name may be given a
database-name qualifier. Examples of unqualified and
qualified names in CREATE
statements:
CREATE TABLE mytable ...; CREATE VIEW myview ...; CREATE PROCEDURE myproc ...; CREATE FUNCTION myfunc ...; CREATE EVENT myevent ...; CREATE TABLE mydb.mytable ...; CREATE VIEW mydb.myview ...; CREATE PROCEDURE mydb.myproc ...; CREATE FUNCTION mydb.myfunc ...; CREATE EVENT mydb.myevent ...;
A trigger is associated with a table, so any qualifier applies to the table name:
CREATE TRIGGER mytrigger ... ON mytable ...; CREATE TRIGGER mytrigger ... ON mydb.mytable ...;
A column name may be given multiple qualifiers to indicate context in statements that reference it, as shown in the following table.
Column Reference | Meaning |
---|---|
col_name |
Column col_name from whichever table used in
the statement contains a column of that name |
tbl_name.col_name |
Column col_name from table
tbl_name of the default
database |
db_name.tbl_name.col_name |
Column col_name from table
tbl_name of the database
db_name |
In other words, a column name may be given a table-name
qualifier, which itself may be given a database-name
qualifier. Examples of unqualified and qualified column
references in SELECT
statements:
SELECT c1 FROM mytable WHERE c2 > 100; SELECT mytable.c1 FROM mytable WHERE mytable.c2 > 100; SELECT mydb.mytable.c1 FROM mydb.mytable WHERE mydb.mytable.c2 > 100;
You need not specify a qualifier for an object reference in a
statement unless the unqualified reference is ambiguous. Suppose
that column c1
occurs only in table
t1
, c2
only in
t2
, and c
in both
t1
and t2
. Any unqualified
reference to c
is ambiguous in a statement
that refers to both tables and must be qualified as
t1.c
or t2.c
to indicate
which table you mean:
SELECT c1, c2, t1.c FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 WHERE t2.c > 100;
Similarly, to retrieve from a table t
in
database db1
and from a table
t
in database db2
in the
same statement, you must qualify the table references: For
references to columns in those tables, qualifiers are required
only for column names that appear in both tables. Suppose that
column c1
occurs only in table
db1.t
, c2
only in
db2.t
, and c
in both
db1.t
and db2.t
. In this
case, c
is ambiguous and must be qualified
but c1
and c2
need not be:
SELECT c1, c2, db1.t.c FROM db1.t INNER JOIN db2.t WHERE db2.t.c > 100;
Table aliases enable qualified column references to be written more simply:
SELECT c1, c2, t1.c FROM db1.t AS t1 INNER JOIN db2.t AS t2 WHERE t2.c > 100;
In MySQL, databases correspond to directories within the data
directory. Each table within a database corresponds to at least
one file within the database directory (and possibly more,
depending on the storage engine). Triggers also correspond to
files. Consequently, the case sensitivity of the underlying
operating system plays a part in the case sensitivity of
database, table, and trigger names. This means such names are
not case-sensitive in Windows, but are case-sensitive in most
varieties of Unix. One notable exception is macOS, which is
Unix-based but uses a default file system type (HFS+) that is
not case-sensitive. However, macOS also supports UFS volumes,
which are case-sensitive just as on any Unix. See
Section 1.8.1, “MySQL Extensions to Standard SQL”. The
lower_case_table_names
system
variable also affects how the server handles identifier case
sensitivity, as described later in this section.
Although database, table, and trigger names are not
case-sensitive on some platforms, you should not refer to one
of these using different cases within the same statement. The
following statement would not work because it refers to a
table both as my_table
and as
MY_TABLE
:
mysql> SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE MY_TABLE.col=1;
Column, index, stored routine, and event names are not case-sensitive on any platform, nor are column aliases.
However, names of logfile groups are case-sensitive. This differs from standard SQL.
By default, table aliases are case-sensitive on Unix, but not so
on Windows or macOS. The following statement would not work on
Unix, because it refers to the alias both as
a
and as A
:
mysql>SELECT
col_name
FROMtbl_name
AS aWHERE a.
col_name
= 1 OR A.col_name
= 2;
However, this same statement is permitted on Windows. To avoid problems caused by such differences, it is best to adopt a consistent convention, such as always creating and referring to databases and tables using lowercase names. This convention is recommended for maximum portability and ease of use.
How table and database names are stored on disk and used in
MySQL is affected by the
lower_case_table_names
system
variable, which you can set when starting
mysqld.
lower_case_table_names
can take
the values shown in the following table. This variable does
not affect case sensitivity of trigger
identifiers. On Unix, the default value of
lower_case_table_names
is 0. On
Windows, the default value is 1. On macOS, the default value is
2.
Value | Meaning |
---|---|
0 |
Table and database names are stored on disk using the lettercase
specified in the CREATE
TABLE or CREATE
DATABASE statement. Name comparisons are
case-sensitive. You should not set
this variable to 0 if you are running MySQL on a system
that has case-insensitive file names (such as Windows or
macOS). If you force this variable to 0 with
--lower-case-table-names=0
on a case-insensitive file system and access
MyISAM tablenames using different
lettercases, index corruption may result. |
1 |
Table names are stored in lowercase on disk and name comparisons are not case-sensitive. MySQL converts all table names to lowercase on storage and lookup. This behavior also applies to database names and table aliases. |
2 |
Table and database names are stored on disk using the lettercase
specified in the CREATE
TABLE or CREATE
DATABASE statement, but MySQL converts them to
lowercase on lookup. Name comparisons are not
case-sensitive. This works only on
file systems that are not case-sensitive!
InnoDB table names are stored in
lowercase, as for
lower_case_table_names=1 . |
If you are using MySQL on only one platform, you do not normally
have to change the
lower_case_table_names
variable
from its default value. However, you may encounter difficulties
if you want to transfer tables between platforms that differ in
file system case sensitivity. For example, on Unix, you can have
two different tables named my_table
and
MY_TABLE
, but on Windows these two names are
considered identical. To avoid data transfer problems arising
from lettercase of database or table names, you have two
options:
Use lower_case_table_names=1
on all
systems. The main disadvantage with this is that when you
use SHOW TABLES
or
SHOW DATABASES
, you do not
see the names in their original lettercase.
Use lower_case_table_names=0
on Unix and
lower_case_table_names=2
on Windows. This
preserves the lettercase of database and table names. The
disadvantage of this is that you must ensure that your
statements always refer to your database and table names
with the correct lettercase on Windows. If you transfer your
statements to Unix, where lettercase is significant, they do
not work if the lettercase is incorrect.
Exception: If you are using
InnoDB
tables and you are trying to avoid
these data transfer problems, you should set
lower_case_table_names
to 1
on all platforms to force names to be converted to
lowercase.
If you plan to set the
lower_case_table_names
system
variable to 1 on Unix, you must first convert your old database
and table names to lowercase before stopping
mysqld and restarting it with the new
variable setting. To do this for an individual table, use
RENAME TABLE
:
RENAME TABLE T1 TO t1;
To convert one or more entire databases, dump them before
setting lower_case_table_names
,
then drop the databases, and reload them after setting
lower_case_table_names
:
Use mysqldump to dump each database:
mysqldump --databases db1 > db1.sql mysqldump --databases db2 > db2.sql ...
Do this for each database that must be recreated.
Use DROP DATABASE
to drop each database.
Stop the server, set
lower_case_table_names
, and
restart the server.
Reload the dump file for each database. Because
lower_case_table_names
is
set, each database and table name will be converted to
lowercase as it is recreated:
mysql < db1.sql mysql < db2.sql ...
Object names may be considered duplicates if their uppercase
forms are equal according to a binary collation. That is true
for names of cursors, conditions, procedures, functions,
savepoints, stored routine parameters, stored program local
variables, and plugins. It is not true for names of columns,
constraints, databases, partitions, statements prepared with
PREPARE
, tables, triggers, users,
and user-defined variables.
File system case sensitivity can affect searches in string
columns of INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables. For
more information, see
Section 10.8.7, “Using Collation in INFORMATION_SCHEMA Searches”.
There is a correspondence between database and table identifiers
and names in the file system. For the basic structure, MySQL
represents each database as a directory in the data directory,
and each table by one or more files in the appropriate database
directory. For the table format files
(.FRM
), the data is always stored in this
structure and location.
For the data and index files, the exact representation on disk
is storage engine specific. These files may be stored in the
same location as the FRM
files, or the
information may be stored in a separate file.
InnoDB
data is stored in the InnoDB data
files. If you are using tablespaces with
InnoDB
, then the specific tablespace files
you create are used instead.
Any character is legal in database or table identifiers except
ASCII NUL (X'00'
). MySQL encodes any
characters that are problematic in the corresponding file system
objects when it creates database directories or table files:
Basic Latin letters (a..zA..Z
), digits
(0..9
) and underscore
(_
) are encoded as is. Consequently,
their case sensitivity directly depends on file system
features.
All other national letters from alphabets that have uppercase/lowercase mapping are encoded as shown in the following table. Values in the Code Range column are UCS-2 values.
Code Range | Pattern | Number | Used | Unused | Blocks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
00C0..017F | [@][0..4][g..z] | 5*20= 100 | 97 | 3 | Latin-1 Supplement + Latin Extended-A |
0370..03FF | [@][5..9][g..z] | 5*20= 100 | 88 | 12 | Greek and Coptic |
0400..052F | [@][g..z][0..6] | 20*7= 140 | 137 | 3 | Cyrillic + Cyrillic Supplement |
0530..058F | [@][g..z][7..8] | 20*2= 40 | 38 | 2 | Armenian |
2160..217F | [@][g..z][9] | 20*1= 20 | 16 | 4 | Number Forms |
0180..02AF | [@][g..z][a..k] | 20*11=220 | 203 | 17 | Latin Extended-B + IPA Extensions |
1E00..1EFF | [@][g..z][l..r] | 20*7= 140 | 136 | 4 | Latin Extended Additional |
1F00..1FFF | [@][g..z][s..z] | 20*8= 160 | 144 | 16 | Greek Extended |
.... .... | [@][a..f][g..z] | 6*20= 120 | 0 | 120 | RESERVED |
24B6..24E9 | [@][@][a..z] | 26 | 26 | 0 | Enclosed Alphanumerics |
FF21..FF5A | [@][a..z][@] | 26 | 26 | 0 | Halfwidth and Fullwidth forms |
One of the bytes in the sequence encodes lettercase. For
example: LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH
GRAVE
is encoded as @0G
,
whereas LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
is encoded as @0g
. Here the third byte
(G
or g
) indicates
lettercase. (On a case-insensitive file system, both letters
will be treated as the same.)
For some blocks, such as Cyrillic, the second byte determines lettercase. For other blocks, such as Latin1 Supplement, the third byte determines lettercase. If two bytes in the sequence are letters (as in Greek Extended), the leftmost letter character stands for lettercase. All other letter bytes must be in lowercase.
All nonletter characters except underscore
(_
), as well as letters from alphabets
that do not have uppercase/lowercase mapping (such as
Hebrew) are encoded using hexadecimal representation using
lowercase letters for hexadecimal digits
a..f
:
0x003F -> @003f 0xFFFF -> @ffff
The hexadecimal values correspond to character values in the
ucs2
double-byte character set.
On Windows, some names such as nul
,
prn
, and aux
are encoded
by appending @@@
to the name when the server
creates the corresponding file or directory. This occurs on all
platforms for portability of the corresponding database object
between platforms.
If you have databases or tables from a version of MySQL older
than 5.1.6 that contain special characters and for which the
underlying directory names or file names have not been updated
to use the new encoding, the server displays their names with a
prefix of #mysql50#
in the output from
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables or
SHOW
statements. For example, if
you have a table named a@b
and its name
encoding has not been updated, SHOW
TABLES
displays it like this:
mysql> SHOW TABLES;
+----------------+
| Tables_in_test |
+----------------+
| #mysql50#a@b |
+----------------+
To refer to such a name for which the encoding has not been
updated, you must supply the #mysql50#
prefix:
mysql>SHOW COLUMNS FROM `a@b`;
ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'test.a@b' doesn't exist mysql>SHOW COLUMNS FROM `#mysql50#a@b`;
+-------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +-------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | i | int(11) | YES | | NULL | | +-------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+
To update old names to eliminate the need to use the special prefix to refer to them, re-encode them with mysqlcheck. The following commands update all names to the new encoding:
mysqlcheck --check-upgrade --all-databases mysqlcheck --fix-db-names --fix-table-names --all-databases
To check only specific databases or tables, omit
--all-databases
and provide
the appropriate database or table arguments. For information
about mysqlcheck invocation syntax, see
Section 4.5.3, “mysqlcheck — A Table Maintenance Program”.
The #mysql50#
prefix is intended only to be
used internally by the server. You should not create databases
or tables with names that use this prefix.
Also, mysqlcheck cannot fix names that
contain literal instances of the @
character that is used for encoding special characters. If you
have databases or tables that contain this character, use
mysqldump to dump them before upgrading to
MySQL 5.1.6 or later, and then reload the dump file after
upgrading.
MySQL supports built-in (native) functions, user-defined functions (UDFs), and stored functions. This section describes how the server recognizes whether the name of a built-in function is used as a function call or as an identifier, and how the server determines which function to use in cases when functions of different types exist with a given name.
The parser uses default rules for parsing names of built-in
functions. These rules can be changed by enabling the
IGNORE_SPACE
SQL mode.
When the parser encounters a word that is the name of a
built-in function, it must determine whether the name
signifies a function call or is instead a nonexpression
reference to an identifier such as a table or column name. For
example, in the following statements, the first reference to
count
is a function call, whereas the
second reference is a table name:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
The parser should recognize the name of a built-in function as indicating a function call only when parsing what is expected to be an expression. That is, in nonexpression context, function names are permitted as identifiers.
However, some built-in functions have special parsing or implementation considerations, so the parser uses the following rules by default to distinguish whether their names are being used as function calls or as identifiers in nonexpression context:
To use the name as a function call in an expression, there
must be no whitespace between the name and the following
(
parenthesis character.
Conversely, to use the function name as an identifier, it must not be followed immediately by a parenthesis.
The requirement that function calls be written with no
whitespace between the name and the parenthesis applies only
to the built-in functions that have special considerations.
COUNT
is one such name. The
sql_functions[]
array in the
sql/lex.h
source file lists the names of
these special functions for which following whitespace
determines their interpretation.
The following list names the functions in MySQL
5.6 that are affected by the
IGNORE_SPACE
setting and
listed as special in the sql/lex.h
source
file. You may find it easiest to treat the no-whitespace
requirement as applying to all function calls.
ADDDATE
BIT_AND
BIT_OR
BIT_XOR
CAST
COUNT
CURDATE
CURTIME
DATE_ADD
DATE_SUB
EXTRACT
GROUP_CONCAT
MAX
MID
MIN
NOW
POSITION
SESSION_USER
STD
STDDEV
STDDEV_POP
STDDEV_SAMP
SUBDATE
SUBSTR
SUBSTRING
SUM
SYSDATE
SYSTEM_USER
TRIM
VARIANCE
VAR_POP
VAR_SAMP
For functions not listed as special in
sql/lex.h
, whitespace does not matter.
They are interpreted as function calls only when used in
expression context and may be used freely as identifiers
otherwise. ASCII
is one such name. However,
for these nonaffected function names, interpretation may vary
in expression context:
is
interpreted as a built-in function if there is one with the
given name; if not,
func_name
()
is
interpreted as a user-defined function or stored function if
one exists with that name.
func_name
()
The IGNORE_SPACE
SQL mode
can be used to modify how the parser treats function names
that are whitespace-sensitive:
With IGNORE_SPACE
disabled, the parser interprets the name as a function
call when there is no whitespace between the name and the
following parenthesis. This occurs even when the function
name is used in nonexpression context:
mysql> CREATE TABLE count(i INT);
ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax ...
near 'count(i INT)'
To eliminate the error and cause the name to be treated as an identifier, either use whitespace following the name or write it as a quoted identifier (or both):
CREATE TABLE count (i INT); CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
With IGNORE_SPACE
enabled, the parser loosens the requirement that there be
no whitespace between the function name and the following
parenthesis. This provides more flexibility in writing
function calls. For example, either of the following
function calls are legal:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; SELECT COUNT (*) FROM mytable;
However, enabling
IGNORE_SPACE
also has
the side effect that the parser treats the affected
function names as reserved words (see
Section 9.3, “Keywords and Reserved Words”). This means that a space
following the name no longer signifies its use as an
identifier. The name can be used in function calls with or
without following whitespace, but causes a syntax error in
nonexpression context unless it is quoted. For example,
with IGNORE_SPACE
enabled, both of the following statements fail with a
syntax error because the parser interprets
count
as a reserved word:
CREATE TABLE count(i INT); CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
To use the function name in nonexpression context, write it as a quoted identifier:
CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
To enable the IGNORE_SPACE
SQL mode, use this statement:
SET sql_mode = 'IGNORE_SPACE';
IGNORE_SPACE
is also enabled
by certain other composite modes such as
ANSI
that include it in
their value:
SET sql_mode = 'ANSI';
Check Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”, to see which composite modes
enable IGNORE_SPACE
.
To minimize the dependency of SQL code on the
IGNORE_SPACE
setting, use
these guidelines:
Avoid creating UDFs or stored functions that have the same name as a built-in function.
Avoid using function names in nonexpression context. For
example, these statements use count
(one of the affected function names affected by
IGNORE_SPACE
), so they
fail with or without whitespace following the name if
IGNORE_SPACE
is enabled:
CREATE TABLE count(i INT); CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
If you must use a function name in nonexpression context, write it as a quoted identifier:
CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
The following rules describe how the server resolves references to function names for function creation and invocation:
Built-in functions and user-defined functions
An error occurs if you try to create a UDF with the same name as a built-in function.
Built-in functions and stored functions
It is possible to create a stored function with the same
name as a built-in function, but to invoke the stored
function it is necessary to qualify it with a schema name.
For example, if you create a stored function named
PI
in the test
schema, invoke it as test.PI()
because
the server resolves PI()
without a qualifier as a reference to the built-in
function. The server generates a warning if the stored
function name collides with a built-in function name. The
warning can be displayed with SHOW
WARNINGS
.
User-defined functions and stored functions
User-defined functions and stored functions share the same namespace, so you cannot create a UDF and a stored function with the same name.
The preceding function name resolution rules have implications for upgrading to versions of MySQL that implement new built-in functions:
If you have already created a user-defined function with a
given name and upgrade MySQL to a version that implements
a new built-in function with the same name, the UDF
becomes inaccessible. To correct this, use
DROP FUNCTION
to drop the
UDF and CREATE FUNCTION
to
re-create the UDF with a different nonconflicting name.
Then modify any affected code to use the new name.
If a new version of MySQL implements a built-in function
with the same name as an existing stored function, you
have two choices: Rename the stored function to use a
nonconflicting name, or change calls to the function so
that they use a schema qualifier (that is, use
syntax). In either case, modify any affected code
accordingly.
schema_name
.func_name
()
Keywords are words that have significance in SQL. Certain
keywords, such as SELECT
,
DELETE
, or
BIGINT
, are reserved and require
special treatment for use as identifiers such as table and column
names. This may also be true for the names of built-in functions.
Nonreserved keywords are permitted as identifiers without quoting. Reserved words are permitted as identifiers if you quote them as described in Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”:
mysql> CREATE TABLE interval (begin INT, end INT);
ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax ...
near 'interval (begin INT, end INT)'
BEGIN
and END
are keywords
but not reserved, so their use as identifiers does not require
quoting. INTERVAL
is a reserved keyword and
must be quoted to be used as an identifier:
mysql> CREATE TABLE `interval` (begin INT, end INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
Exception: A word that follows a period in a qualified name must be an identifier, so it need not be quoted even if it is reserved:
mysql> CREATE TABLE mydb.interval (begin INT, end INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
Names of built-in functions are permitted as identifiers but may
require care to be used as such. For example,
COUNT
is acceptable as a column name. However,
by default, no whitespace is permitted in function invocations
between the function name and the following (
character. This requirement enables the parser to distinguish
whether the name is used in a function call or in nonfunction
context. For further details on recognition of function names, see
Section 9.2.5, “Function Name Parsing and Resolution”.
The following list shows the keywords and reserved words in
MySQL 5.6, along with changes to individual words
from version to version. Reserved keywords are marked with (R).
In addition, _FILENAME
is reserved.
At some point, you might upgrade to a higher version, so it is a
good idea to have a look at future reserved words, too. You can
find these in the manuals that cover higher versions of MySQL.
Most of the reserved words in the list are forbidden by standard
SQL as column or table names (for example,
GROUP
). A few are reserved because MySQL
needs them and uses a yacc parser.
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
ACCESSIBLE
(R)
ACTION
ADD
(R)
AFTER
AGAINST
AGGREGATE
ALGORITHM
ALL
(R)
ALTER
(R)
ANALYSE
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
ANALYZE
(R)
AND
(R)
ANY
AS
(R)
ASC
(R)
ASCII
ASENSITIVE
(R)
AT
AUTHORS
; removed in 5.6.8
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
AUTO_INCREMENT
AVG
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
BACKUP
BEFORE
(R)
BEGIN
BETWEEN
(R)
BIGINT
(R)
BINARY
(R)
BINLOG
BIT
BLOB
(R)
BLOCK
BOOL
BOOLEAN
BOTH
(R)
BTREE
BY
(R)
BYTE
CACHE
CALL
(R)
CASCADE
(R)
CASCADED
CASE
(R)
CATALOG_NAME
CHAIN
CHANGE
(R)
CHANGED
CHAR
(R)
CHARACTER
(R)
CHARSET
CHECK
(R)
CHECKSUM
CIPHER
CLASS_ORIGIN
CLIENT
CLOSE
COALESCE
CODE
COLLATE
(R)
COLLATION
COLUMN
(R)
COLUMNS
COLUMN_FORMAT
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
COLUMN_NAME
COMMENT
COMMIT
COMMITTED
COMPACT
COMPLETION
COMPRESSED
CONCURRENT
CONDITION
(R)
CONNECTION
CONSISTENT
CONSTRAINT
(R)
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG
CONSTRAINT_NAME
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
CONTAINS
CONTEXT
CONTINUE
(R)
CONTRIBUTORS
; removed in 5.6.8
CONVERT
(R)
CPU
CREATE
(R)
CROSS
(R)
CUBE
CURRENT
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
CURRENT_DATE
(R)
CURRENT_TIME
(R)
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
(R)
CURRENT_USER
(R)
CURSOR
(R)
CURSOR_NAME
DATA
DATABASE
(R)
DATABASES
(R)
DATAFILE
DATE
DATETIME
DAY
DAY_HOUR
(R)
DAY_MICROSECOND
(R)
DAY_MINUTE
(R)
DAY_SECOND
(R)
DEALLOCATE
DEC
(R)
DECIMAL
(R)
DECLARE
(R)
DEFAULT
(R)
DEFAULT_AUTH
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
DEFINER
DELAYED
(R)
DELAY_KEY_WRITE
DELETE
(R)
DESC
(R)
DESCRIBE
(R)
DES_KEY_FILE
DETERMINISTIC
(R)
DIAGNOSTICS
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
DIRECTORY
DISABLE
DISCARD
DISK
DISTINCT
(R)
DISTINCTROW
(R)
DIV
(R)
DO
DOUBLE
(R)
DROP
(R)
DUAL
(R)
DUMPFILE
DUPLICATE
DYNAMIC
EACH
(R)
ELSE
(R)
ELSEIF
(R)
ENABLE
ENCLOSED
(R)
END
ENDS
ENGINE
ENGINES
ENUM
ERROR
ERRORS
ESCAPE
ESCAPED
(R)
EVENT
EVENTS
EVERY
EXCHANGE
EXECUTE
EXISTS
(R)
EXIT
(R)
EXPANSION
EXPIRE
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
EXPLAIN
(R)
EXPORT
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
EXTENDED
EXTENT_SIZE
FALSE
(R)
FAST
FAULTS
FETCH
(R)
FIELDS
FILE
FIRST
FIXED
FLOAT
(R)
FLOAT4
(R)
FLOAT8
(R)
FLUSH
FOR
(R)
FORCE
(R)
FOREIGN
(R)
FORMAT
; added in 5.6.5 (nonreserved)
FOUND
FROM
(R)
FULL
FULLTEXT
(R)
FUNCTION
GENERAL
; became nonreserved in 5.6.1
GEOMETRY
GEOMETRYCOLLECTION
GET
(R); added in 5.6.4 (reserved)
GET_FORMAT
GLOBAL
GRANT
(R)
GRANTS
GROUP
(R)
HANDLER
HASH
HAVING
(R)
HELP
HIGH_PRIORITY
(R)
HOST
HOSTS
HOUR
HOUR_MICROSECOND
(R)
HOUR_MINUTE
(R)
HOUR_SECOND
(R)
IDENTIFIED
IF
(R)
IGNORE
(R)
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
; became nonreserved in 5.6.1
IMPORT
IN
(R)
INDEX
(R)
INDEXES
INFILE
(R)
INITIAL_SIZE
INNER
(R)
INOUT
(R)
INSENSITIVE
(R)
INSERT
(R)
INSERT_METHOD
INSTALL
INT
(R)
INT1
(R)
INT2
(R)
INT3
(R)
INT4
(R)
INT8
(R)
INTEGER
(R)
INTERVAL
(R)
INTO
(R)
INVOKER
IO
IO_AFTER_GTIDS
(R); added in 5.6.5 (reserved)
IO_BEFORE_GTIDS
(R); added in 5.6.5 (reserved)
IO_THREAD
IPC
IS
(R)
ISOLATION
ISSUER
ITERATE
(R)
JOIN
(R)
KEY
(R)
KEYS
(R)
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
KILL
(R)
LANGUAGE
LAST
LEADING
(R)
LEAVE
(R)
LEAVES
LEFT
(R)
LESS
LEVEL
LIKE
(R)
LIMIT
(R)
LINEAR
(R)
LINES
(R)
LINESTRING
LIST
LOAD
(R)
LOCAL
LOCALTIME
(R)
LOCALTIMESTAMP
(R)
LOCK
(R)
LOCKS
LOGFILE
LOGS
LONG
(R)
LONGBLOB
(R)
LONGTEXT
(R)
LOOP
(R)
LOW_PRIORITY
(R)
MASTER
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION
; added in 5.6.5 (nonreserved)
MASTER_BIND
(R); added in 5.6.1 (reserved)
MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY
MASTER_DELAY
MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD
; became nonreserved in 5.6.1
MASTER_HOST
MASTER_LOG_FILE
MASTER_LOG_POS
MASTER_PASSWORD
MASTER_PORT
MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
; added in 5.6.1 (nonreserved)
MASTER_SERVER_ID
MASTER_SSL
MASTER_SSL_CA
MASTER_SSL_CAPATH
MASTER_SSL_CERT
MASTER_SSL_CIPHER
MASTER_SSL_CRL
; added in 5.6.3 (nonreserved)
MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH
; added in 5.6.3 (nonreserved)
MASTER_SSL_KEY
MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT
(R)
MASTER_USER
MATCH
(R)
MAXVALUE
(R)
MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR
MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR
MAX_ROWS
MAX_SIZE
MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS
MEDIUM
MEDIUMBLOB
(R)
MEDIUMINT
(R)
MEDIUMTEXT
(R)
MEMORY
MERGE
MESSAGE_TEXT
MICROSECOND
MIDDLEINT
(R)
MIGRATE
MINUTE
MINUTE_MICROSECOND
(R)
MINUTE_SECOND
(R)
MIN_ROWS
MOD
(R)
MODE
MODIFIES
(R)
MODIFY
MONTH
MULTILINESTRING
MULTIPOINT
MULTIPOLYGON
MUTEX
MYSQL_ERRNO
NAME
NAMES
NATIONAL
NATURAL
(R)
NCHAR
NDB
NDBCLUSTER
NEW
NEXT
NO
NODEGROUP
NONE
NOT
(R)
NO_WAIT
NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
(R)
NULL
(R)
NUMBER
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
NUMERIC
(R)
NVARCHAR
OFFSET
OLD_PASSWORD
ON
(R)
ONE
ONE_SHOT
; became reserved in 5.6.1; removed in 5.6.5
ONLY
; added in 5.6.5 (nonreserved)
OPEN
OPTIMIZE
(R)
OPTION
(R)
OPTIONALLY
(R)
OPTIONS
OR
(R)
ORDER
(R)
OUT
(R)
OUTER
(R)
OUTFILE
(R)
OWNER
PACK_KEYS
PAGE
PARSER
PARTIAL
PARTITION
(R); became reserved in 5.6.2
PARTITIONING
PARTITIONS
PASSWORD
PHASE
PLUGIN
PLUGINS
PLUGIN_DIR
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
POINT
POLYGON
PORT
PRECISION
(R)
PREPARE
PRESERVE
PREV
PRIMARY
(R)
PRIVILEGES
PROCEDURE
(R)
PROCESSLIST
PROFILE
PROFILES
PROXY
; added in 5.6.1 (nonreserved)
PURGE
(R)
QUARTER
QUERY
QUICK
RANGE
(R)
READ
(R)
READS
(R)
READ_ONLY
READ_WRITE
(R)
REAL
(R)
REBUILD
RECOVER
REDOFILE
REDO_BUFFER_SIZE
REDUNDANT
REFERENCES
(R)
REGEXP
(R)
RELAY
RELAYLOG
RELAY_LOG_FILE
RELAY_LOG_POS
RELAY_THREAD
RELEASE
(R)
RELOAD
REMOVE
RENAME
(R)
REORGANIZE
REPAIR
REPEAT
(R)
REPEATABLE
REPLACE
(R)
REPLICATION
REQUIRE
(R)
RESET
RESIGNAL
(R)
RESTORE
RESTRICT
(R)
RESUME
RETURN
(R)
RETURNED_SQLSTATE
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
RETURNS
REVERSE
REVOKE
(R)
RIGHT
(R)
RLIKE
(R)
ROLLBACK
ROLLUP
ROUTINE
ROW
ROWS
ROW_COUNT
; added in 5.6.4 (nonreserved)
ROW_FORMAT
RTREE
SAVEPOINT
SCHEDULE
SCHEMA
(R)
SCHEMAS
(R)
SCHEMA_NAME
SECOND
SECOND_MICROSECOND
(R)
SECURITY
SELECT
(R)
SENSITIVE
(R)
SEPARATOR
(R)
SERIAL
SERIALIZABLE
SERVER
SESSION
SET
(R)
SHARE
SHOW
(R)
SHUTDOWN
SIGNAL
(R)
SIGNED
SIMPLE
SLAVE
SLOW
; became nonreserved in 5.6.1
SMALLINT
(R)
SNAPSHOT
SOCKET
SOME
SONAME
SOUNDS
SOURCE
SPATIAL
(R)
SPECIFIC
(R)
SQL
(R)
SQLEXCEPTION
(R)
SQLSTATE
(R)
SQLWARNING
(R)
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
; added in 5.6.5 (reserved); became nonreserved in 5.6.6
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
; added in 5.6.5 (reserved); became nonreserved in 5.6.6
SQL_BIG_RESULT
(R)
SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
SQL_CACHE
SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS
(R)
SQL_NO_CACHE
SQL_SMALL_RESULT
(R)
SQL_THREAD
SQL_TSI_DAY
SQL_TSI_HOUR
SQL_TSI_MINUTE
SQL_TSI_MONTH
SQL_TSI_QUARTER
SQL_TSI_SECOND
SQL_TSI_WEEK
SQL_TSI_YEAR
SSL
(R)
START
STARTING
(R)
STARTS
STATS_AUTO_RECALC
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
STATS_PERSISTENT
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
STATS_SAMPLE_PAGES
; added in 5.6.6 (nonreserved)
STATUS
STOP
STORAGE
STRAIGHT_JOIN
(R)
STRING
SUBCLASS_ORIGIN
SUBJECT
SUBPARTITION
SUBPARTITIONS
SUPER
SUSPEND
SWAPS
SWITCHES
TABLE
(R)
TABLES
TABLESPACE
TABLE_CHECKSUM
TABLE_NAME
TEMPORARY
TEMPTABLE
TERMINATED
(R)
TEXT
THAN
THEN
(R)
TIME
TIMESTAMP
TIMESTAMPADD
TIMESTAMPDIFF
TINYBLOB
(R)
TINYINT
(R)
TINYTEXT
(R)
TO
(R)
TRAILING
(R)
TRANSACTION
TRIGGER
(R)
TRIGGERS
TRUE
(R)
TRUNCATE
TYPE
TYPES
UNCOMMITTED
UNDEFINED
UNDO
(R)
UNDOFILE
UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
UNICODE
UNINSTALL
UNION
(R)
UNIQUE
(R)
UNKNOWN
UNLOCK
(R)
UNSIGNED
(R)
UNTIL
UPDATE
(R)
UPGRADE
USAGE
(R)
USE
(R)
USER
USER_RESOURCES
USE_FRM
USING
(R)
UTC_DATE
(R)
UTC_TIME
(R)
UTC_TIMESTAMP
(R)
VALUE
VALUES
(R)
VARBINARY
(R)
VARCHAR
(R)
VARCHARACTER
(R)
VARIABLES
VARYING
(R)
VIEW
WAIT
WARNINGS
WEEK
WEIGHT_STRING
WHEN
(R)
WHERE
(R)
WHILE
(R)
WITH
(R)
WORK
WRAPPER
WRITE
(R)
X509
XA
XML
XOR
(R)
YEAR
YEAR_MONTH
(R)
ZEROFILL
(R)
The following list shows the keywords and reserved words that are added in MySQL 5.6, compared to MySQL 5.5. Reserved keywords are marked with (R).
A | C | D | E | F | G | I | M | N | O | P | R | S | W
ANALYSE
COLUMN_FORMAT
CURRENT
DEFAULT_AUTH
DIAGNOSTICS
EXCHANGE
EXPIRE
EXPORT
FORMAT
GET
(R)
IO_AFTER_GTIDS
(R)
IO_BEFORE_GTIDS
(R)
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION
MASTER_BIND
(R)
MASTER_DELAY
MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
MASTER_SSL_CRL
MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH
NUMBER
ONLY
PLUGIN_DIR
RETURNED_SQLSTATE
REVERSE
ROW_COUNT
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
STATS_AUTO_RECALC
STATS_PERSISTENT
STATS_SAMPLE_PAGES
WEIGHT_STRING
You can store a value in a user-defined variable in one statement and refer to it later in another statement. This enables you to pass values from one statement to another.
User variables are written as
@
, where the
variable name var_name
var_name
consists of
alphanumeric characters, .
,
_
, and $
. A user variable
name can contain other characters if you quote it as a string or
identifier (for example, @'my-var'
,
@"my-var"
, or @`my-var`
).
User-defined variables are session specific. A user variable defined by one client cannot be seen or used by other clients. All variables for a given client session are automatically freed when that client exits.
User variable names are not case-sensitive.
One way to set a user-defined variable is by issuing a
SET
statement:
SET @var_name
=expr
[, @var_name
=expr
] ...
For SET
,
either =
or
:=
can be
used as the assignment operator.
User variables can be assigned a value from a limited set of data
types: integer, decimal, floating-point, binary or nonbinary
string, or NULL
value. Assignment of decimal
and real values does not preserve the precision or scale of the
value. A value of a type other than one of the permissible types
is converted to a permissible type. For example, a value having a
temporal or spatial data type is converted to a binary string.
If a user variable is assigned a nonbinary (character) string value, it has the same character set and collation as the string. The coercibility of user variables is implicit. (This is the same coercibility as for table column values.)
Hexadecimal or bit values assigned to user variables are treated
as binary strings. To assign a hexadecimal or bit value as a
number to a user variable, use it in numeric context. For example,
add 0 or use CAST(... AS UNSIGNED)
:
mysql>SET @v1 = X'41';
mysql>SET @v2 = X'41'+0;
mysql>SET @v3 = CAST(X'41' AS UNSIGNED);
mysql>SELECT @v1, @v2, @v3;
+------+------+------+ | @v1 | @v2 | @v3 | +------+------+------+ | A | 65 | 65 | +------+------+------+ mysql>SET @v1 = b'1000001';
mysql>SET @v2 = b'1000001'+0;
mysql>SET @v3 = CAST(b'1000001' AS UNSIGNED);
mysql>SELECT @v1, @v2, @v3;
+------+------+------+ | @v1 | @v2 | @v3 | +------+------+------+ | A | 65 | 65 | +------+------+------+
If the value of a user variable is selected in a result set, it is returned to the client as a string.
If you refer to a variable that has not been initialized, it has a
value of NULL
and a type of string.
User variables may be used in most contexts where expressions are
permitted. This does not currently include contexts that
explicitly require a literal value, such as in the
LIMIT
clause of a
SELECT
statement, or the
IGNORE
clause of a N
LINESLOAD DATA
statement.
You can also assign a value to a user variable in statements other
than SET
.
In this case, the assignment operator must be
:=
and not
=
because
the latter is treated as the comparison operator
=
in statements
other than
SET
:
mysql>SET @t1=1, @t2=2, @t3:=4;
mysql>SELECT @t1, @t2, @t3, @t4 := @t1+@t2+@t3;
+------+------+------+--------------------+ | @t1 | @t2 | @t3 | @t4 := @t1+@t2+@t3 | +------+------+------+--------------------+ | 1 | 2 | 4 | 7 | +------+------+------+--------------------+
As a general rule, other than in
SET
statements, you should never assign a value to a user variable and
read the value within the same statement. For example, to
increment a variable, this is okay:
SET @a = @a + 1;
For other statements, such as
SELECT
, you might get the results
you expect, but this is not guaranteed. In the following
statement, you might think that MySQL will evaluate
@a
first and then do an assignment second:
SELECT @a, @a:=@a+1, ...;
However, the order of evaluation for expressions involving user variables is undefined.
Another issue with assigning a value to a variable and reading the
value within the same
non-SET
statement is that the default result type of a variable is based
on its type at the start of the statement. The following example
illustrates this:
mysql>SET @a='test';
mysql>SELECT @a,(@a:=20) FROM
tbl_name
;
For this SELECT
statement, MySQL
reports to the client that column one is a string and converts all
accesses of @a
to strings, even though @a is
set to a number for the second row. After the
SELECT
statement executes,
@a
is regarded as a number for the next
statement.
To avoid problems with this behavior, either do not assign a value
to and read the value of the same variable within a single
statement, or else set the variable to 0
,
0.0
, or ''
to define its
type before you use it.
In a SELECT
statement, each select
expression is evaluated only when sent to the client. This means
that in a HAVING
, GROUP BY
,
or ORDER BY
clause, referring to a variable
that is assigned a value in the select expression list does
not work as expected:
mysql> SELECT (@aa:=id) AS a, (@aa+3) AS b FROM tbl_name
HAVING b=5;
The reference to b
in the
HAVING
clause refers to an alias for an
expression in the select list that uses @aa
.
This does not work as expected: @aa
contains
the value of id
from the previous selected row,
not from the current row.
User variables are intended to provide data values. They cannot be
used directly in an SQL statement as an identifier or as part of
an identifier, such as in contexts where a table or database name
is expected, or as a reserved word such as
SELECT
. This is true even if the
variable is quoted, as shown in the following example:
mysql>SELECT c1 FROM t;
+----+ | c1 | +----+ | 0 | +----+ | 1 | +----+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SET @col = "c1";
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @col FROM t;
+------+ | @col | +------+ | c1 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT `@col` FROM t;
ERROR 1054 (42S22): Unknown column '@col' in 'field list' mysql> SET @col = "`c1`"; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @col FROM t;
+------+ | @col | +------+ | `c1` | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
An exception to this principle that user variables cannot be used to provide identifiers, is when you are constructing a string for use as a prepared statement to execute later. In this case, user variables can be used to provide any part of the statement. The following example illustrates how this can be done:
mysql>SET @c = "c1";
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SET @s = CONCAT("SELECT ", @c, " FROM t");
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>PREPARE stmt FROM @s;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.04 sec) Statement prepared mysql>EXECUTE stmt;
+----+ | c1 | +----+ | 0 | +----+ | 1 | +----+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
See Section 13.5, “Prepared Statements”, for more information.
A similar technique can be used in application programs to construct SQL statements using program variables, as shown here using PHP 5:
<?php $mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "user", "pass", "test"); if( mysqli_connect_errno() ) die("Connection failed: %s\n", mysqli_connect_error()); $col = "c1"; $query = "SELECT $col FROM t"; $result = $mysqli->query($query); while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) { echo "<p>" . $row["$col"] . "</p>\n"; } $result->close(); $mysqli->close(); ?>
Assembling an SQL statement in this fashion is sometimes known as “Dynamic SQL”.
This section lists the grammar rules that expressions must follow in MySQL and provides additional information about the types of terms that may appear in expressions.
The following grammar rules define expression syntax in MySQL.
The grammar shown here is based on that given in the
sql/sql_yacc.yy
file of MySQL source
distributions. For additional information about some of the
expression terms, see Expression Term Notes.
expr
:expr
ORexpr
|expr
||expr
|expr
XORexpr
|expr
ANDexpr
|expr
&&expr
| NOTexpr
| !expr
|boolean_primary
IS [NOT] {TRUE | FALSE | UNKNOWN} |boolean_primary
boolean_primary
:boolean_primary
IS [NOT] NULL |boolean_primary
<=>predicate
|boolean_primary
comparison_operator
predicate
|boolean_primary
comparison_operator
{ALL | ANY} (subquery
) |predicate
comparison_operator
: = | >= | > | <= | < | <> | !=predicate
:bit_expr
[NOT] IN (subquery
) |bit_expr
[NOT] IN (expr
[,expr
] ...) |bit_expr
[NOT] BETWEENbit_expr
ANDpredicate
|bit_expr
SOUNDS LIKEbit_expr
|bit_expr
[NOT] LIKEsimple_expr
[ESCAPEsimple_expr
] |bit_expr
[NOT] REGEXPbit_expr
|bit_expr
bit_expr
:bit_expr
|bit_expr
|bit_expr
&bit_expr
|bit_expr
<<bit_expr
|bit_expr
>>bit_expr
|bit_expr
+bit_expr
|bit_expr
-bit_expr
|bit_expr
*bit_expr
|bit_expr
/bit_expr
|bit_expr
DIVbit_expr
|bit_expr
MODbit_expr
|bit_expr
%bit_expr
|bit_expr
^bit_expr
|bit_expr
+interval_expr
|bit_expr
-interval_expr
|simple_expr
simple_expr
:literal
|identifier
|function_call
|simple_expr
COLLATEcollation_name
|param_marker
|variable
|simple_expr
||simple_expr
| +simple_expr
| -simple_expr
| ~simple_expr
| !simple_expr
| BINARYsimple_expr
| (expr
[,expr
] ...) | ROW (expr
,expr
[,expr
] ...) | (subquery
) | EXISTS (subquery
) | {identifier
expr
} |match_expr
|case_expr
|interval_expr
For operator precedence, see Section 12.3.1, “Operator Precedence”. The precedence and meaning of some operators depends on the SQL mode:
By default, ||
is a logical OR
operator. With
PIPES_AS_CONCAT
enabled,
||
is string
concatenation, with a precedence between
^
and
the unary operators.
By default, !
has a higher precedence than NOT
. With
HIGH_NOT_PRECEDENCE
enabled, !
and
NOT
have the same precedence.
For literal value syntax, see Section 9.1, “Literal Values”.
For identifier syntax, see Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
Variables can be user variables, system variables, or stored program local variables or parameters:
User variables: Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”
System variables: Section 5.1.8, “Using System Variables”
Stored program local variables: Section 13.6.4.1, “Local Variable DECLARE Statement”
Stored program parameters: Section 13.1.15, “CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE FUNCTION Statements”
param_marker
is ?
as used in prepared statements for placeholders. See
Section 13.5.1, “PREPARE Statement”.
(
indicates a subquery that returns a single value; that is, a
scalar subquery. See Section 13.2.10.1, “The Subquery as Scalar Operand”.
subquery
)
{
is ODBC escape syntax
and is accepted for ODBC compatibility. The value is
identifier
expr
}expr
. The {
and
}
curly braces in the syntax should be
written literally; they are not metasyntax as used elsewhere in
syntax descriptions.
match_expr
indicates a
MATCH
expression. See
Section 12.9, “Full-Text Search Functions”.
case_expr
indicates a
CASE
expression. See
Section 12.4, “Control Flow Functions”.
interval_expr
represents a temporal
interval. See Temporal Intervals.
interval_expr
in expressions
represents a temporal interval. Intervals have this syntax:
INTERVALexpr
unit
expr
represents a quantity.
unit
represents the unit for
interpreting the quantity; it is a specifier such as
HOUR
, DAY
, or
WEEK
. The INTERVAL
keyword
and the unit
specifier are not
case-sensitive.
The following table shows the expected form of the
expr
argument for each
unit
value.
Table 9.2 Temporal Interval Expression and Unit Arguments
unit Value |
Expected expr Format |
---|---|
MICROSECOND |
MICROSECONDS |
SECOND |
SECONDS |
MINUTE |
MINUTES |
HOUR |
HOURS |
DAY |
DAYS |
WEEK |
WEEKS |
MONTH |
MONTHS |
QUARTER |
QUARTERS |
YEAR |
YEARS |
SECOND_MICROSECOND |
'SECONDS.MICROSECONDS' |
MINUTE_MICROSECOND |
'MINUTES:SECONDS.MICROSECONDS' |
MINUTE_SECOND |
'MINUTES:SECONDS' |
HOUR_MICROSECOND |
'HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS.MICROSECONDS' |
HOUR_SECOND |
'HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS' |
HOUR_MINUTE |
'HOURS:MINUTES' |
DAY_MICROSECOND |
'DAYS HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS.MICROSECONDS' |
DAY_SECOND |
'DAYS HOURS:MINUTES:SECONDS' |
DAY_MINUTE |
'DAYS HOURS:MINUTES' |
DAY_HOUR |
'DAYS HOURS' |
YEAR_MONTH |
'YEARS-MONTHS' |
MySQL permits any punctuation delimiter in the
expr
format. Those shown in the table
are the suggested delimiters.
Temporal intervals are used for certain functions, such as
DATE_ADD()
and
DATE_SUB()
:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2018-05-01',INTERVAL 1 DAY);
-> '2018-05-02' mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('2018-05-01',INTERVAL 1 YEAR);
-> '2017-05-01' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2020-12-31 23:59:59',
->INTERVAL 1 SECOND);
-> '2021-01-01 00:00:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2018-12-31 23:59:59',
->INTERVAL 1 DAY);
-> '2019-01-01 23:59:59' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2100-12-31 23:59:59',
->INTERVAL '1:1' MINUTE_SECOND);
-> '2101-01-01 00:01:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('2025-01-01 00:00:00',
->INTERVAL '1 1:1:1' DAY_SECOND);
-> '2024-12-30 22:58:59' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1900-01-01 00:00:00',
->INTERVAL '-1 10' DAY_HOUR);
-> '1899-12-30 14:00:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_SUB('1998-01-02', INTERVAL 31 DAY);
-> '1997-12-02' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1992-12-31 23:59:59.000002',
->INTERVAL '1.999999' SECOND_MICROSECOND);
-> '1993-01-01 00:00:01.000001'
Temporal arithmetic also can be performed in expressions using
INTERVAL
together with the
+
or
-
operator:
date
+ INTERVALexpr
unit
date
- INTERVALexpr
unit
INTERVAL
is permitted on either
side of the expr
unit
+
operator if the expression on the other side is a date or
datetime value. For the
-
operator,
INTERVAL
is permitted only on
the right side, because it makes no sense to subtract a date or
datetime value from an interval.
expr
unit
mysql>SELECT '2018-12-31 23:59:59' + INTERVAL 1 SECOND;
-> '2019-01-01 00:00:00' mysql>SELECT INTERVAL 1 DAY + '2018-12-31';
-> '2019-01-01' mysql>SELECT '2025-01-01' - INTERVAL 1 SECOND;
-> '2024-12-31 23:59:59'
The EXTRACT()
function uses the
same kinds of unit
specifiers as
DATE_ADD()
or
DATE_SUB()
, but extracts parts
from the date rather than performing date arithmetic:
mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR FROM '2019-07-02');
-> 2019 mysql>SELECT EXTRACT(YEAR_MONTH FROM '2019-07-02 01:02:03');
-> 201907
Temporal intervals can be used in CREATE
EVENT
statements:
CREATE EVENT myevent ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 HOUR DO UPDATE myschema.mytable SET mycol = mycol + 1;
If you specify an interval value that is too short (does not
include all the interval parts that would be expected from the
unit
keyword), MySQL assumes that you
have left out the leftmost parts of the interval value. For
example, if you specify a unit
of
DAY_SECOND
, the value of
expr
is expected to have days, hours,
minutes, and seconds parts. If you specify a value like
'1:10'
, MySQL assumes that the days and hours
parts are missing and the value represents minutes and seconds.
In other words, '1:10' DAY_SECOND
is
interpreted in such a way that it is equivalent to
'1:10' MINUTE_SECOND
. This is analogous to
the way that MySQL interprets
TIME
values as representing
elapsed time rather than as a time of day.
expr
is treated as a string, so be
careful if you specify a nonstring value with
INTERVAL
. For example, with an interval
specifier of HOUR_MINUTE
, '6/4' is treated as
6 hours, four minutes, whereas 6/4
evaluates
to 1.5000
and is treated as 1 hour, 5000
minutes:
mysql>SELECT '6/4', 6/4;
-> 1.5000 mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2019-01-01', INTERVAL '6/4' HOUR_MINUTE);
-> '2019-01-01 06:04:00' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2019-01-01', INTERVAL 6/4 HOUR_MINUTE);
-> '2019-01-04 12:20:00'
To ensure interpretation of the interval value as you expect, a
CAST()
operation may be used. To
treat 6/4
as 1 hour, 5 minutes, cast it to a
DECIMAL
value with a single
fractional digit:
mysql>SELECT CAST(6/4 AS DECIMAL(3,1));
-> 1.5 mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('1970-01-01 12:00:00',
->INTERVAL CAST(6/4 AS DECIMAL(3,1)) HOUR_MINUTE);
-> '1970-01-01 13:05:00'
If you add to or subtract from a date value something that contains a time part, the result is automatically converted to a datetime value:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2023-01-01', INTERVAL 1 DAY);
-> '2023-01-02' mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2023-01-01', INTERVAL 1 HOUR);
-> '2023-01-01 01:00:00'
If you add MONTH
,
YEAR_MONTH
, or YEAR
and
the resulting date has a day that is larger than the maximum day
for the new month, the day is adjusted to the maximum days in
the new month:
mysql> SELECT DATE_ADD('2019-01-30', INTERVAL 1 MONTH);
-> '2019-02-28'
Date arithmetic operations require complete dates and do not
work with incomplete dates such as
'2016-07-00'
or badly malformed dates:
mysql>SELECT DATE_ADD('2016-07-00', INTERVAL 1 DAY);
-> NULL mysql>SELECT '2005-03-32' + INTERVAL 1 MONTH;
-> NULL
MySQL Server supports three comment styles:
From a #
character to the end of the line.
From a --
sequence to the end of the
line. In MySQL, the --
(double-dash)
comment style requires the second dash to be followed by at
least one whitespace or control character (such as a space,
tab, newline, and so on). This syntax differs slightly from
standard SQL comment syntax, as discussed in
Section 1.8.2.4, “'--' as the Start of a Comment”.
From a /*
sequence to the following
*/
sequence, as in the C programming
language. This syntax enables a comment to extend over
multiple lines because the beginning and closing sequences
need not be on the same line.
The following example demonstrates all three comment styles:
mysql>SELECT 1+1; # This comment continues to the end of line
mysql>SELECT 1+1; -- This comment continues to the end of line
mysql>SELECT 1 /* this is an in-line comment */ + 1;
mysql>SELECT 1+
/*
this is a
multiple-line comment
*/
1;
Nested comments are not supported. (Under some conditions, nested comments might be permitted, but usually are not, and users should avoid them.)
MySQL Server supports certain variants of C-style comments. These enable you to write code that includes MySQL extensions, but is still portable, by using comments of the following form:
/*! MySQL-specific code
*/
In this case, MySQL Server parses and executes the code within the
comment as it would any other SQL statement, but other SQL servers
will ignore the extensions. For example, MySQL Server recognizes
the STRAIGHT_JOIN
keyword in the following
statement, but other servers will not:
SELECT /*! STRAIGHT_JOIN */ col1 FROM table1,table2 WHERE ...
If you add a version number after the !
character, the syntax within the comment is executed only if the
MySQL version is greater than or equal to the specified version
number. The KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
keyword in the
following comment is executed only by servers from MySQL 5.1.10 or
higher:
CREATE TABLE t1(a INT, KEY (a)) /*!50110 KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=1024 */;
The comment syntax just described applies to how the mysqld server parses SQL statements. The mysql client program also performs some parsing of statements before sending them to the server. (It does this to determine statement boundaries within a multiple-statement input line.) For information about differences between the server and mysql client parsers, see Section 4.5.1.6, “mysql Client Tips”.
Comments in /*!12345 ... */
format are not
stored on the server. If this format is used to comment stored
programs, the comments are not retained in the program body.
The use of short-form mysql commands such as
\C
within multiple-line /* ...
*/
comments is not supported.