Table of Contents
MySQL supports a number of data types in several categories: numeric types, date and time types, and string (character and byte) types. This chapter provides an overview of these data types, a more detailed description of the properties of the types in each category, and a summary of the data type storage requirements. The initial overview is intentionally brief. The more detailed descriptions later in the chapter should be consulted for additional information about particular data types, such as the permissible formats in which you can specify values.
MySQL 4.1 and up also supports extensions for handing spatial data. For information about these data types, see Chapter 16, Spatial Extensions.
Data type descriptions use these conventions:
M indicates the maximum display width
for integer types. For floating-point and fixed-point types,
M is the total number of digits that
can be stored (the precision). For string types,
M is the maximum length. The maximum
permissible value of M depends on the
data type.
D applies to floating-point and
fixed-point types and indicates the number of digits following
the decimal point (the scale). The maximum possible value is 30,
but should be no greater than
M–2.
Square brackets (“[” and
“]”) indicate optional parts of
type definitions.
A summary of the numeric data types follows. For additional information about properties and storage requirements of the numeric types, see Section 10.2, “Numeric Types”, and Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
M indicates the maximum display width
for integer types. The maximum legal display width is 255.
Display width is unrelated to the range of values a type can
contain, as described in Section 10.2, “Numeric Types”. For
floating-point and fixed-point types,
M is the total number of digits that
can be stored.
If you specify ZEROFILL for a numeric column,
MySQL automatically adds the UNSIGNED
attribute to the column.
Numeric data types that permit the UNSIGNED
attribute also permit SIGNED. However, these
data types are signed by default, so the
SIGNED attribute has no effect.
As of MySQL 4.1, SERIAL is an alias for
BIGINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
UNIQUE.
SERIAL DEFAULT VALUE in the definition of an
integer column is an alias for NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
UNIQUE.
When you use subtraction between integer values where one is
of type UNSIGNED, the result is unsigned
unless the
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION SQL
mode is enabled. See Section 11.10, “Cast Functions and Operators”.
In versions of MySQL up to and lincluding 4.1,
BIT is a synonym for
TINYINT(1).
TINYINT[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A very small integer. The signed range is
-128 to 127. The
unsigned range is 0 to
255.
These types are synonyms for TINYINT(1).
The synonym BOOLEAN was added
in MySQL 4.1.0. A value of zero is considered false. Nonzero
values are considered true:
mysql>SELECT IF(0, 'true', 'false');+------------------------+ | IF(0, 'true', 'false') | +------------------------+ | false | +------------------------+ mysql>SELECT IF(1, 'true', 'false');+------------------------+ | IF(1, 'true', 'false') | +------------------------+ | true | +------------------------+ mysql>SELECT IF(2, 'true', 'false');+------------------------+ | IF(2, 'true', 'false') | +------------------------+ | true | +------------------------+
However, the values TRUE and
FALSE are merely aliases for
1 and 0, respectively,
as shown here:
mysql>SELECT IF(0 = FALSE, 'true', 'false');+--------------------------------+ | IF(0 = FALSE, 'true', 'false') | +--------------------------------+ | true | +--------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT IF(1 = TRUE, 'true', 'false');+-------------------------------+ | IF(1 = TRUE, 'true', 'false') | +-------------------------------+ | true | +-------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT IF(2 = TRUE, 'true', 'false');+-------------------------------+ | IF(2 = TRUE, 'true', 'false') | +-------------------------------+ | false | +-------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT IF(2 = FALSE, 'true', 'false');+--------------------------------+ | IF(2 = FALSE, 'true', 'false') | +--------------------------------+ | false | +--------------------------------+
The last two statements display the results shown because
2 is equal to neither
1 nor 0.
SMALLINT[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A small integer. The signed range is
-32768 to 32767. The
unsigned range is 0 to
65535.
MEDIUMINT[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A medium-sized integer. The signed range is
-8388608 to 8388607.
The unsigned range is 0 to
16777215.
INT[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A normal-size integer. The signed range is
-2147483648 to
2147483647. The unsigned range is
0 to 4294967295.
INTEGER[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
This type is a synonym for
INT.
BIGINT[(
M)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A large integer. The signed range is
-9223372036854775808 to
9223372036854775807. The unsigned range
is 0 to
18446744073709551615.
As of MySQL 4.1, SERIAL is an alias for
BIGINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
UNIQUE.
Some things you should be aware of with respect to
BIGINT columns:
All arithmetic is done using signed
BIGINT or
DOUBLE values, so you
should not use unsigned big integers larger than
9223372036854775807 (63 bits) except
with bit functions! If you do that, some of the last
digits in the result may be wrong because of rounding
errors when converting a
BIGINT value to a
DOUBLE.
MySQL 4.0 can handle
BIGINT in the following
cases:
When using integers to store large unsigned values
in a BIGINT column.
In
MIN(
or
col_name)MAX(,
where col_name)col_name refers to
a BIGINT column.
When using operators
(+,
-,
*,
and so on) where both operands are integers.
You can always store an exact integer value in a
BIGINT column by storing
it using a string. In this case, MySQL performs a
string-to-number conversion that involves no
intermediate double-precision representation.
The -,
+, and
*
operators use BIGINT
arithmetic when both operands are integer values. This
means that if you multiply two big integers (or results
from functions that return integers), you may get
unexpected results when the result is larger than
9223372036854775807.
DECIMAL[(
M[,D])]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
An unpacked fixed-point number. Behaves like a
CHAR column;
“unpacked” means the number is stored as a
string, using one character for each digit of the value.
M is the total number of digits
and D is the number of digits
after the decimal point. The decimal point and (for negative
numbers) the “-” sign are
not counted in M, although space
for them is reserved. If D is 0,
values have no decimal point or fractional part. The maximum
range of DECIMAL values is
the same as for DOUBLE, but
the actual range for a given
DECIMAL column may be
constrained by the choice of M
and D. If
D is omitted, the default is 0.
If M is omitted, the default is
10.
UNSIGNED, if specified, disallows
negative values.
Before MySQL 3.23, the value of
M must be large enough to
include the space needed for the sign and the decimal
point characters.
DEC[(,
M[,D])]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]NUMERIC[(,
M[,D])]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]FIXED[(
M[,D])]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
These types are synonyms for
DECIMAL. The
FIXED synonym was added in
MySQL 4.1.0 for compatibility with other database systems.
FLOAT[(
M,D)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A small (single-precision) floating-point number.
Permissible values are -3.402823466E+38
to -1.175494351E-38,
0, and 1.175494351E-38
to 3.402823466E+38. These are the
theoretical limits, based on the IEEE standard. The actual
range might be slightly smaller depending on your hardware
or operating system.
M is the total number of digits
and D is the number of digits
following the decimal point. If M
and D are omitted, values are
stored to the limits permitted by the hardware. A
single-precision floating-point number is accurate to
approximately 7 decimal places.
UNSIGNED, if specified, disallows
negative values.
Using FLOAT might give you
some unexpected problems because all calculations in MySQL
are done with double precision. See
Section B.5.5.7, “Solving Problems with No Matching Rows”.
DOUBLE[(
M,D)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A normal-size (double-precision) floating-point number.
Permissible values are
-1.7976931348623157E+308 to
-2.2250738585072014E-308,
0, and
2.2250738585072014E-308 to
1.7976931348623157E+308. These are the
theoretical limits, based on the IEEE standard. The actual
range might be slightly smaller depending on your hardware
or operating system.
M is the total number of digits
and D is the number of digits
following the decimal point. If M
and D are omitted, values are
stored to the limits permitted by the hardware. A
double-precision floating-point number is accurate to
approximately 15 decimal places.
UNSIGNED, if specified, disallows
negative values.
DOUBLE
PRECISION[(,
M,D)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]REAL[(
M,D)]
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
These types are synonyms for
DOUBLE. Exception: If the
REAL_AS_FLOAT SQL mode is
enabled, REAL is a synonym
for FLOAT rather than
DOUBLE.
FLOAT(
p)
[UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL]
A floating-point number. p
represents the precision in bits, but MySQL uses this value
only to determine whether to use
FLOAT or
DOUBLE for the resulting data
type. If p is from 0 to 24, the
data type becomes FLOAT with
no M or
D values. If
p is from 25 to 53, the data type
becomes DOUBLE with no
M or D
values. The range of the resulting column is the same as for
the single-precision FLOAT or
double-precision DOUBLE data
types described earlier in this section.
As of MySQL 3.23, this data type holds true floating-point
values. In earlier MySQL versions,
FLOAT(
always has two decimals.
p)
FLOAT(
syntax is provided for ODBC compatibility.
p)
A summary of the temporal data types follows. For additional information about properties and storage requirements of the temporal types, see Section 10.3, “Date and Time Types”, and Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”. For descriptions of functions that operate on temporal values, see Section 11.7, “Date and Time Functions”.
For the DATE and
DATETIME range descriptions,
“supported” means that although earlier values
might work, there is no guarantee.
A date. The supported range is
'1000-01-01' to
'9999-12-31'. MySQL displays
DATE values in
'YYYY-MM-DD' format, but permits
assignment of values to DATE
columns using either strings or numbers.
A date and time combination. The supported range is
'1000-01-01 00:00:00' to
'9999-12-31 23:59:59'. MySQL displays
DATETIME values in
'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' format, but permits
assignment of values to
DATETIME columns using either
strings or numbers.
A timestamp. The range is '1970-01-01
00:00:01' UTC to '2038-01-19
03:14:07' UTC.
TIMESTAMP values are stored
as the number of seconds since the epoch
('1970-01-01 00:00:00' UTC). A
TIMESTAMP cannot represent
the value '1970-01-01 00:00:00' because
that is equivalent to 0 seconds from the epoch and the value
0 is reserved for representing '0000-00-00
00:00:00', the “zero”
TIMESTAMP value.
MySQL displays TIMESTAMP
values in 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' format.
To convert the value to a number, add +0.
A TIMESTAMP column is useful
for recording the date and time of an
INSERT or
UPDATE operation. By default,
the first TIMESTAMP column in
a table is automatically set to the date and time of the
most recent operation if you do not assign it a value
yourself. You can also set any
TIMESTAMP column to the
current date and time by assigning it a
NULL value. Variations on automatic
initialization and update properties are described in
Section 10.3.1.2, “TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1”.
In MySQL 4.1, TIMESTAMP is
returned as a string with the format 'YYYY-MM-DD
HH:MM:SS'. Display widths (used as described in
the following paragraphs) are no longer supported; the
display width is fixed at 19 characters. To obtain the value
as a number, add +0.
In MySQL 4.0 and earlier,
TIMESTAMP values are
displayed in YYYYMMDDHHMMSS,
YYMMDDHHMMSS,
YYYYMMDD, or YYMMDD
format, depending on whether M is
14 (or missing), 12, 8, or 6, but permits you to assign
values to TIMESTAMP columns
using either strings or numbers. The
M argument affects only how a
TIMESTAMP column is
displayed, not storage. Its values always are stored using
four bytes each. From MySQL 4.0.12, the
--new option can be used to make the server
behave as in MySQL 4.1.
Note that
TIMESTAMP(
columns where M)M is 8 or 14 are
reported to be numbers, whereas other
TIMESTAMP(
columns are reported to be strings. This is just to ensure
that you can reliably dump and restore the table with these
types.
M)
The behavior of TIMESTAMP
columns changed considerably in MySQL 4.1. For complete
information on the differences with regard to this data
type in MySQL 4.1 and later versions (as opposed to MySQL
4.0 and earlier versions), be sure to see
Section 10.3.1.1, “TIMESTAMP Properties Prior to MySQL 4.1”, and
Section 10.3.1.2, “TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1”.
A time. The range is '-838:59:59' to
'838:59:59'. MySQL displays
TIME values in
'HH:MM:SS' format, but permits assignment
of values to TIME columns
using either strings or numbers.
A year in two-digit or four-digit format. The default is
four-digit format. In four-digit format, the permissible
values are 1901 to
2155, and 0000. In
two-digit format, the permissible values are
70 to 69, representing
years from 1970 to 2069. MySQL displays
YEAR values in
YYYY format, but permits assignment of
values to YEAR columns using
either strings or numbers. The
YEAR type is unavailable
prior to MySQL 3.22.
The SUM() and
AVG() aggregate functions do not
work with temporal values. (They convert the values to numbers,
which loses the part after the first nonnumeric character.) To
work around this problem, convert to numeric units, perform the
aggregate operation, and convert back to a temporal value.
Examples:
SELECT SEC_TO_TIME(SUM(TIME_TO_SEC(time_col))) FROMtbl_name; SELECT FROM_DAYS(SUM(TO_DAYS(date_col))) FROMtbl_name;
A summary of the string data types follows. For additional information about properties and storage requirements of the string types, see Section 10.4, “String Types”, and Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
In some cases, MySQL may change a string column to a type
different from that given in a CREATE
TABLE or ALTER TABLE
statement. See Section 12.1.5.2, “Silent Column Specification Changes”.
In MySQL 4.1 and up, string data types include some features that you may not have encountered in working with versions of MySQL prior to 4.1:
As of version 4.1, MySQL interprets length specifications in
character column definitions in character units. (Before
MySQL 4.1, column lengths were interpreted in bytes.) This
applies to CHAR,
VARCHAR, and the
TEXT types.
Column definitions for many string data types can include
attributes that specify the character set or collation of
the column. These attributes apply to the
CHAR,
VARCHAR, the
TEXT types,
ENUM, and
SET data types:
The CHARACTER SET attribute specifies
the character set, and the COLLATE
attribute specifies a collation for the character set.
For example:
CREATE TABLE t
(
c1 VARCHAR(20) CHARACTER SET utf8,
c2 TEXT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_general_cs
);
This table definition creates a column named
c1 that has a character set of
utf8 with the default collation for
that character set, and a column named
c2 that has a character set of
latin1 and a case-sensitive
collation.
The rules for assigning the character set and collation
when either or both of the CHARACTER
SET and COLLATE attributes
are missing are described in
Section 9.1.3.4, “Column Character Set and Collation”.
CHARSET is a synonym for
CHARACTER SET.
From MySQL 4.1.2 on, specifying the CHARACTER
SET binary attribute for a character data type
causes the column to be created as the corresponding
binary data type: CHAR
becomes BINARY,
VARCHAR becomes
VARBINARY, and
TEXT becomes
BLOB. For the
ENUM and
SET data types, this does
not occur; they are created as declared. Suppose that
you specify a table using this definition:
CREATE TABLE t
(
c1 VARCHAR(10) CHARACTER SET binary,
c2 TEXT CHARACTER SET binary,
c3 ENUM('a','b','c') CHARACTER SET binary
);
The resulting table has this definition:
CREATE TABLE t
(
c1 VARBINARY(10),
c2 BLOB,
c3 ENUM('a','b','c') CHARACTER SET binary
);
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, the ASCII
attribute is shorthand for CHARACTER SET
latin1.
From MySQL 4.1.1 on, the UNICODE
attribute is shorthand for CHARACTER SET
ucs2.
As of MySQL 4.1.2, the BINARY
attribute is shorthand for specifying the binary
collation of the column character set. In this case,
sorting and comparison are based on numeric character
values. (Before MySQL 4.1.2, BINARY
caused a column to store binary strings and sorting and
comparison were based on numeric byte values. This is
the same as using character values for single-byte
character sets, but not for multi-byte character sets.)
Character column sorting and comparison are based on the
character set assigned to the column. (Before MySQL 4.1,
sorting and comparison were based on the collation of the
server character set.) For the
CHAR,
VARCHAR,
TEXT,
ENUM, and
SET data types, you can
declare a column with a binary collation or the
BINARY attribute to cause sorting and
comparison to use the underlying character code values
rather than a lexical ordering.
Section 9.1, “Character Set Support”, provides additional information about use of character sets in MySQL 4.1 and up.
[NATIONAL] CHAR[(
M)]
[CHARACTER SET charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A fixed-length string that is always right-padded with
spaces to the specified length when stored.
M represents the column length in
characters. The range of M is 0
to 255. (1 to 255 prior to MySQL 3.23). If
M is omitted, the length is 1.
Trailing spaces are removed when
CHAR values are retrieved.
In MySQL 4.1, a CHAR column
with a length specification greater than 255 is converted to
the smallest TEXT type that
can hold values of the given length. For example,
CHAR(500) is converted to
TEXT, and
CHAR(200000) is converted to
MEDIUMTEXT. This is a
compatibility feature. However, this conversion causes the
column to become a variable-length column, and also affects
trailing-space removal.
CHAR is shorthand for
CHARACTER.
NATIONAL CHAR (or its
equivalent short form, NCHAR)
is the standard SQL way to define that a
CHAR column should use some
predefined character set. MySQL 4.1 and up uses
utf8 as this predefined character set.
Section 9.1.3.6, “National Character Set”.
From MySQL 4.1.2 on, the CHAR
BYTE data type is an alias for the
BINARY data type. This is a
compatibility feature.
MySQL permits you to create a column of type
CHAR(0). This is useful primarily when
you have to be compliant with old applications that depend
on the existence of a column but that do not actually use
its value. CHAR(0) is also quite nice
when you need a column that can take only two values: A
column that is defined as CHAR(0) NULL
occupies only one bit and can take only the values
NULL and '' (the empty
string).
[NATIONAL] VARCHAR(
M)
[CHARACTER SET charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A variable-length string. M
represents the maximum column length in characters. The
range of M is 1 to 255 before
MySQL 4.0.2, and 0 to 255 as of MySQL 4.0.2.
MySQL stores VARCHAR values
as a one-byte length prefix plus data. The length prefix
indicates the number of bytes in the value.
Trailing spaces are removed when
VARCHAR values are stored.
This differs from the standard SQL specification.
In MySQL 4.1, a VARCHAR
column with a length specification greater than 255 is
converted to the smallest
TEXT type that can hold
values of the given length. For example,
VARCHAR(500) is converted to
TEXT, and
VARCHAR(200000) is converted to
MEDIUMTEXT. This is a
compatibility feature. However, this conversion affects
trailing-space removal.
VARCHAR is shorthand for
CHARACTER VARYING.
NATIONAL VARCHAR is the
standard SQL way to define that a
VARCHAR column should use
some predefined character set. MySQL 4.1 and up uses
utf8 as this predefined character set.
Section 9.1.3.6, “National Character Set”. As of MySQL 4.1.1,
NVARCHAR is shorthand for
NATIONAL VARCHAR.
The BINARY type is similar to
the CHAR type, but stores
binary byte strings rather than nonbinary character strings.
M represents the column length in
bytes.
This type was added in MySQL 4.1.2.
The VARBINARY type is similar
to the VARCHAR type, but
stores binary byte strings rather than nonbinary character
strings. M represents the maximum
column length in bytes.
This type was added in MySQL 4.1.2.
A BLOB column with a maximum
length of 255 (28 – 1)
bytes. Each TINYBLOB value is
stored using a one-byte length prefix that indicates the
number of bytes in the value.
TINYTEXT
[CHARACTER SET
charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A TEXT column with a maximum
length of 255 (28 – 1)
characters. The effective maximum length is less if the
value contains multi-byte characters. Each
TINYTEXT value is stored
using a one-byte length prefix that indicates the number of
bytes in the value.
A BLOB column with a maximum
length of 65,535 (216 – 1)
bytes. Each BLOB value is
stored using a two-byte length prefix that indicates the
number of bytes in the value.
Beginning with MySQL 4.1, an optional length
M can be given for this type.
MySQL creates the column as the smallest
BLOB type large enough to
hold values M bytes long.
TEXT[(
M)]
[CHARACTER SET charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A TEXT column with a maximum
length of 65,535 (216 – 1)
characters. The effective maximum length is less if the
value contains multi-byte characters. Each
TEXT value is stored using a
two-byte length prefix that indicates the number of bytes in
the value.
Beginning with MySQL 4.1, an optional length
M can be given for this type.
MySQL creates the column as the smallest
TEXT type large enough to
hold values M characters long.
A BLOB column with a maximum
length of 16,777,215 (224 –
1) bytes. Each MEDIUMBLOB
value is stored using a three-byte length prefix that
indicates the number of bytes in the value.
MEDIUMTEXT
[CHARACTER SET
charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A TEXT column with a maximum
length of 16,777,215 (224 –
1) characters. The effective maximum length is less if the
value contains multi-byte characters. Each
MEDIUMTEXT value is stored
using a three-byte length prefix that indicates the number
of bytes in the value.
A BLOB column with a maximum
length of 4,294,967,295 or 4GB
(232 – 1) bytes. Up to
MySQL 3.23, the client/server protocol and
MyISAM tables had a limit of 16MB per
communication packet or table row. As of MySQL 4.0, the
effective maximum length of
LONGBLOB columns depends on
the configured maximum packet size in the client/server
protocol and available memory. Each
LONGBLOB value is stored
using a four-byte length prefix that indicates the number of
bytes in the value.
LONGTEXT
[CHARACTER SET
charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A TEXT column with a maximum
length of 4,294,967,295 or 4GB
(232 – 1) characters. The
effective maximum length is less if the value contains
multi-byte characters. Up to MySQL 3.23, the client/server
protocol and MyISAM tables had a limit of
16MB per communication packet or table row. As of MySQL 4.0,
the effective maximum length of
LONGTEXT
columns depends on the configured maximum packet size in the
client/server protocol and available memory. Each
LONGTEXT
value is stored using a four-byte length prefix that
indicates the number of bytes in the value.
ENUM('
value1','value2',...)
[CHARACTER SET charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
An enumeration. A string object that can have only one
value, chosen from the list of values
',
value1'',
value2'..., NULL or the
special '' error value. An
ENUM column can have a
maximum of 65,535 distinct values.
ENUM values are represented
internally as integers.
SET('
value1','value2',...)
[CHARACTER SET charset_name]
[COLLATE
collation_name]
A set. A string object that can have zero or more values,
each of which must be chosen from the list of values
',
value1'',
value2'... A SET
column can have a maximum of 64 members.
SET values are represented
internally as integers.
The DEFAULT
clause in a data type specification indicates a default value
for a column. With one exception, the default value must be a
constant; it cannot be a function or an expression. This means,
for example, that you cannot set the default for a date column
to be the value of a function such as
valueNOW() or
CURRENT_DATE. The exception is
that you can specify
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP as the default
for a TIMESTAMP column as of
MySQL 4.1.2. See Section 10.3.1.2, “TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1”.
If a column definition includes no explicit
DEFAULT value, MySQL determines the default
value as follows:
If the column can take NULL as a value, the
column is defined with an explicit DEFAULT
NULL clause.
If the column cannot take NULL as the value,
MySQL defines the column with an explicit
DEFAULT clause, using the implicit default
value for the column data type. Implicit defaults are defined as
follows:
For numeric types, the default is 0, with
the exception that for integer or floating-point types
declared with the AUTO_INCREMENT
attribute, the default is the next value in the sequence.
For date and time types other than
TIMESTAMP, the default is the
appropriate “zero” value for the type. For the
first TIMESTAMP column in a
table, the default value is the current date and time. See
Section 10.3, “Date and Time Types”.
For string types other than
ENUM, the default value is
the empty string. For ENUM,
the default is the first enumeration value.
BLOB and
TEXT columns cannot be assigned a
default value.
For a given table, you can use the SHOW
CREATE TABLE statement to see which columns have an
explicit DEFAULT clause.
SERIAL DEFAULT VALUE in the definition of an
integer column is an alias for NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
UNIQUE.
MySQL supports all the standard SQL numeric data types. These
types include the exact numeric data types
(INTEGER,
SMALLINT,
DECIMAL, and
NUMERIC), as well as the
approximate numeric data types
(FLOAT,
REAL, and
DOUBLE PRECISION). The keyword
INT is a synonym for
INTEGER, and the keyword
DEC is a synonym for
DECIMAL. MySQL treats
DOUBLE as a synonym for
DOUBLE PRECISION (a nonstandard
extension). MySQL also treats REAL
as a synonym for DOUBLE PRECISION
(a nonstandard variation), unless the
REAL_AS_FLOAT SQL mode is
enabled.
For information about how MySQL handles assignment of out-of-range values to columns and overflow during expression evaluation, see Section 10.2.5, “Out-of-Range and Overflow Handling”.
For information about numeric type storage requirements, see Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
The data type used for the result of a calculation on numeric operands depends on the types of the operands and the operations performed on them. For more information, see Section 11.6.1, “Arithmetic Operators”.
MySQL supports the SQL standard integer types
INTEGER (or
INT) and
SMALLINT. As an extension to the
standard, MySQL also supports the integer types
TINYINT,
MEDIUMINT, and
BIGINT. The following table shows
the required storage and range for each integer type.
The DECIMAL and
NUMERIC types store exact numeric
data values. These types are used when it is important to
preserve exact precision, for example with monetary data. In
MySQL, NUMERIC is implemented as
DECIMAL, so the following remarks
about DECIMAL apply equally to
NUMERIC.
Through version 4.1, MySQL stores
DECIMAL values as strings, rather
than in binary format. One character is used for each digit of
the value, the decimal point (if the scale is greater than 0),
and the “-” sign (for negative
numbers).
In a DECIMAL column declaration,
the precision and scale can be (and usually is) specified; for
example:
salary DECIMAL(5,2)
In this example, 5 is the precision and
2 is the scale. The precision represents the
number of significant digits that are stored for values, and the
scale represents the number of digits that can be stored
following the decimal point.
Standard SQL requires that DECIMAL(5,2) be
able to store any value with five digits and two decimals, so
values that can be stored in the salary
column range from -999.99 to
999.99. In versions up to and including 4.1,
MySQL varies from this limit in two ways due to the use of
string format for value storage:
On the positive end of the range, the column actually can
store numbers up to 9999.99. For positive
numbers, MySQL uses the byte reserved for the sign to extend
the upper end of the range.
DECIMAL columns in MySQL
before 3.23 are stored differently and cannot represent all
the values required by standard SQL. This is because for a
type of
DECIMAL(,
the value of M,D)M includes the bytes
for the sign and the decimal point. The range of the
salary column before MySQL 3.23 would be
-9.99 to 99.99.
In standard SQL, the syntax
DECIMAL( is
equivalent to
M)DECIMAL(.
Similarly, the syntax M,0)DECIMAL is
equivalent to
DECIMAL(,
where the implementation is permitted to decide the value of
M,0)M. As of MySQL 3.23.6, both of these
variant forms of DECIMAL syntax
are supported. The default value of M
is 10. Before 3.23.6, M and
D both must be specified explicitly.
If the scale is 0, DECIMAL values
contain no decimal point or fractional part.
The maximum range of DECIMAL
values is the same as for DOUBLE,
but the actual range for a given
DECIMAL column can be constrained
by the precision or scale for a given column. When such a column
is assigned a value with more digits following the decimal point
than are permitted by the specified scale, the value is
converted to that scale. (The precise behavior is operating
system-specific, but generally the effect is truncation to the
permissible number of digits.)
The FLOAT and
DOUBLE types represent
approximate numeric data values. MySQL uses four bytes for
single-precision values and eight bytes for double-precision
values.
For FLOAT, the SQL standard
permits an optional specification of the precision (but not the
range of the exponent) in bits following the keyword
FLOAT in parentheses. MySQL also
supports this optional precision specification, but the
precision value is used only to determine storage size. A
precision from 0 to 23 results in a four-byte single-precision
FLOAT column. A precision from 24
to 53 results in an eight-byte double-precision
DOUBLE column.
MySQL permits a nonstandard syntax:
FLOAT(
or
M,D)REAL(
or M,D)DOUBLE
PRECISION(.
Here,
“M,D)(”
means than values can be stored with up to
M,D)M digits in total, of which
D digits may be after the decimal
point. For example, a column defined as
FLOAT(7,4) will look like
-999.9999 when displayed. MySQL performs
rounding when storing values, so if you insert
999.00009 into a
FLOAT(7,4) column, the approximate result is
999.0001.
Because floating-point values are approximate and not stored as exact values, attempts to treat them as exact in comparisons may lead to problems. They are also subject to platform or implementation dependencies. For more information, see Section B.5.5.8, “Problems with Floating-Point Values”
For maximum portability, code requiring storage of approximate
numeric data values should use
FLOAT or
DOUBLE PRECISION with no
specification of precision or number of digits.
MySQL supports an extension for optionally specifying the
display width of integer data types in parentheses following the
base keyword for the type. For example,
INT(4) specifies an
INT with a display width of four
digits. This optional display width may be used by applications
to display integer values having a width less than the width
specified for the column by left-padding them with spaces. (That
is, this width is present in the metadata returned with result
sets. Whether it is used or not is up to the application.)
The display width does not constrain the
range of values that can be stored in the column. Nor does it
prevent values wider than the column display width from being
displayed correctly. For example, a column specified as
SMALLINT(3) has the usual
SMALLINT range of
-32768 to 32767, and
values outside the range permitted by three digits are displayed
in full using more than three digits.
When used in conjunction with the optional (nonstandard)
attribute ZEROFILL, the default padding of
spaces is replaced with zeros. For example, for a column
declared as INT(4) ZEROFILL, a
value of 5 is retrieved as
0005.
The ZEROFILL attribute is ignored when a
column is involved in expressions or
UNION queries.
If you store values larger than the display width in an
integer column that has the ZEROFILL
attribute, you may experience problems when MySQL generates
temporary tables for some complicated joins. In these cases,
MySQL assumes that the data values fit within the column
display width.
All integer types can have an optional (nonstandard) attribute
UNSIGNED. Unsigned type can be used to permit
only nonnegative numbers in a column or when you need a larger
upper numeric range for the column. For example, if an
INT column is
UNSIGNED, the size of the column's range is
the same but its endpoints shift from
-2147483648 and 2147483647
up to 0 and 4294967295.
As of MySQL 4.0.2, floating-point and fixed-point types also can
be UNSIGNED. As with integer types, this
attribute prevents negative values from being stored in the
column. Unlike the integer types, the upper range of column
values remains the same.
If you specify ZEROFILL for a numeric column,
MySQL automatically adds the UNSIGNED
attribute to the column.
Integer or floating-point data types can have the additional
attribute AUTO_INCREMENT. When you insert a
value of NULL (recommended) or
0 into an indexed
AUTO_INCREMENT column, the column is set to
the next sequence value. Typically this is
, where
value+1value is the largest value for the
column currently in the table. AUTO_INCREMENT
sequences begin with 1.
When MySQL stores a value in a numeric column that is outside the permissible range of the column data type, MySQL clips the value to the appropriate endpoint of the range and stores the resulting value instead.
For example, when an out-of-range value is assigned to an
integer column, MySQL stores the value representing the
corresponding endpoint of the column data type range. If you
store 256 into a TINYINT or
TINYINT UNSIGNED column, MySQL stores 127 or
255, respectively. When a floating-point or fixed-point column
is assigned a value that exceeds the range implied by the
specified (or default) precision and scale, MySQL stores the
value representing the corresponding endpoint of that range.
Column-assignment conversions that occur due to clipping are
reported as warnings for ALTER
TABLE, LOAD
DATA INFILE, UPDATE,
and multiple-row INSERT
statements.
In MySQL 4.1, overflow handling during numeric expression evaluation depends on the types of the operands:
Integer overflow results in silent wraparound.
DECIMAL overflow results in a truncated
result and a warning.
Floating-point overflow produces a NULL
result. Overflow for some operations can result in
+INF, -INF, or
NaN.
For example, the largest signed
BIGINT value is
9223372036854775807, so the following expression wraps around to
the minimum BIGINT value:
mysql> SELECT 9223372036854775807 + 1;
+-------------------------+
| 9223372036854775807 + 1 |
+-------------------------+
| -9223372036854775808 |
+-------------------------+
To enable the operation to succeed in this case, convert the value to unsigned;
mysql> SELECT CAST(9223372036854775807 AS UNSIGNED) + 1;
+-------------------------------------------+
| CAST(9223372036854775807 AS UNSIGNED) + 1 |
+-------------------------------------------+
| 9223372036854775808 |
+-------------------------------------------+
Whether overflow occurs depends on the range of the operands, so
another way to handle the preceding expression is to use
exact-value arithmetic because
DECIMAL values have a larger
range than integers:
mysql> SELECT 9223372036854775807.0 + 1;
+---------------------------+
| 9223372036854775807.0 + 1 |
+---------------------------+
| 9223372036854775808.0 |
+---------------------------+
Subtraction between integer values, where one is of type
UNSIGNED, produces an unsigned result by
default. If the result would otherwise have been negative, it
becomes the maximum integer value. If the
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION SQL
mode is enabled, the result is negative.
mysql>SET sql_mode = '';mysql>SELECT CAST(0 AS UNSIGNED) - 1;+-------------------------+ | CAST(0 AS UNSIGNED) - 1 | +-------------------------+ | 18446744073709551615 | +-------------------------+ mysql>SET sql_mode = 'NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION';mysql>SELECT CAST(0 AS UNSIGNED) - 1;+-------------------------+ | CAST(0 AS UNSIGNED) - 1 | +-------------------------+ | -1 | +-------------------------+
If the result of such an operation is used to update an
UNSIGNED integer column, the result is
clipped to the maximum value for the column type, or clipped to
0 if NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION
is enabled.
The date and time types for representing temporal values are
DATE,
TIME,
DATETIME,
TIMESTAMP, and
YEAR. Each temporal type has a
range of legal values, as well as a “zero” value that
is used when you specify an illegal value that MySQL cannot
represent. The TIMESTAMP type has
special automatic updating behavior, described later on. For
temporal type storage requirements, see
Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
MySQL versions through 4.1 accept certain “illegal”
values for dates, such as '2009-11-31'. This is
useful when you want to store a possibly incorrect value specified
by a user (for example, in a web form) in the database for future
processing. MySQL verifies only that the month is in the range
from 0 to 12 and that the day is in the range from 0 to 31. These
ranges are defined to include zero because MySQL permits you to
store dates where the day or month and day are zero in a
DATE or
DATETIME column. This is extremely
useful for applications that need to store a birthdate for which
you do not know the exact date. In this case, you simply store the
date as '2009-00-00' or
'2009-01-00'. If you store dates such as these,
you should not expect to get correct results for functions such as
DATE_SUB() or
DATE_ADD() that require complete
dates.
MySQL also permits you to store '0000-00-00' as
a “dummy date.” This is in some cases more convenient
(and uses less data and index space) than storing
NULL values.
Keep in mind these general considerations when working with date and time types:
MySQL retrieves values for a given date or time type in a standard output format, but it attempts to interpret a variety of formats for input values that you supply (for example, when you specify a value to be assigned to or compared to a date or time type). For a description of the permitted formats for date and time types, see Section 8.1.3, “Date and Time Literals”. It is expected that you supply legal values. Unpredictable results may occur if you use values in other formats.
Although MySQL tries to interpret values in several formats,
date parts must always be given in year-month-day order (for
example, '98-09-04'), rather than in the
month-day-year or day-month-year orders commonly used
elsewhere (for example, '09-04-98',
'04-09-98').
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 are
converted to 1970-1999.
Year values in the range 00-69 are
converted to 2000-2069.
Conversion of values from one temporal type to another occurs according to the rules in Section 10.3.5, “Conversion Between Date and Time Types”.
MySQL automatically converts a date or time value to a number if the value is used in a numeric context and vice versa.
By default, when MySQL encounters a value for a date or time
type that is out of range or otherwise illegal for the type,
it converts the value to the “zero” value for
that type. The exception is that out-of-range
TIME values are clipped to the
appropriate endpoint of the
TIME range.
“Zero” date or time values used through MyODBC
are converted automatically to NULL in
MyODBC 2.50.12 and above, because ODBC cannot handle such
values.
The following table shows the format of the “zero”
value for each type. The “zero” values are special,
but you can store or refer to them explicitly using the values
shown in the table. You can also do this using the values
'0' or 0, which are easier
to write.
| Data Type | “Zero” Value |
|---|---|
DATE | '0000-00-00' |
TIME | '00:00:00' |
DATETIME | '0000-00-00 00:00:00' |
TIMESTAMP (4.1 and up) | '0000-00-00 00:00:00' |
TIMESTAMP (before 4.1) | 00000000000000 |
YEAR | 0000 |
The DATE,
DATETIME, and
TIMESTAMP types are related. This
section describes their characteristics, how they are similar,
and how they differ.
The DATE type is used for values
with a date part but no time part. MySQL retrieves and displays
DATE values in
'YYYY-MM-DD' format. The supported range is
'1000-01-01' to
'9999-12-31'.
The DATETIME type is used for
values that contain both date and time parts. MySQL retrieves
and displays DATETIME values in
'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' format. The supported
range is '1000-01-01 00:00:00' to
'9999-12-31 23:59:59'.
For the DATE and
DATETIME range descriptions,
“supported” means that although earlier values
might work, there is no guarantee.
The TIMESTAMP data type is used
for values that contain both date and time parts.
TIMESTAMP has a range of
'1970-01-01 00:00:01' UTC to
'2038-01-19 03:14:07' UTC. Its properties are
described in more detail in Section 10.3.1.2, “TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1”.
MySQL recognizes DATE,
DATETIME, and
TIMESTAMP values in several
formats, described in Section 8.1.3, “Date and Time Literals”.
A DATETIME or
TIMESTAMP value can include a
trailing fractional seconds part in up to microseconds (6
digits) precision. Although this fractional part is recognized,
it is discarded from values stored into
DATETIME or
TIMESTAMP columns. For
information about fractional seconds support in MySQL, see
Section 10.3.4, “Fractional Seconds in Time Values”.
Illegal DATE,
DATETIME, or
TIMESTAMP values are converted to
the “zero” value of the appropriate type
('0000-00-00', '0000-00-00
00:00:00', or 00000000000000).
Be aware of certain problems when specifying date values:
MySQL permits a “relaxed” format for values
specified as strings, in which any punctuation character may
be used as the delimiter between date parts or time parts.
In some cases, this syntax can be deceiving. For example, a
value such as '10:11:12' might look like
a time value because of the
“:” delimiter, but is
interpreted as the year '2010-11-12' if
used in a date context. The value
'10:45:15' is converted to
'0000-00-00' because
'45' is not a legal month.
The MySQL server performs only basic checking on the
validity of a date: The ranges for year, month, and day are
1000 to 9999, 00 to 12, and 00 to 31, respectively. Any date
containing parts not within these ranges is subject to
conversion to '0000-00-00'. Please note
that this still permits you to store invalid dates such as
'2002-04-31'. To ensure that a date is
valid, perform a check in your application.
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 00-69 are
converted to 2000-2069.
Year values in the range 70-99 are
converted to 1970-1999.
TIMESTAMP values are converted
from the current time zone to UTC for storage, and converted
back from UTC to the current time zone for retrieval. (This
occurs only for the TIMESTAMP
data type, not for other types such as
DATETIME.)
The TIMESTAMP data type
provides a type that you can use to automatically mark
INSERT or
UPDATE operations with the
current date and time. If you have multiple
TIMESTAMP columns in a table,
only the first one is updated automatically. (From MySQL 4.1.2
on, you can specify which
TIMESTAMP column updates; see
Section 10.3.1.2, “TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1”.)
Automatic updating of the first
TIMESTAMP column in a table
occurs under any of the following conditions:
You explicitly set the column to NULL.
The column is not specified explicitly in an
INSERT or
LOAD DATA
INFILE statement.
The column is not specified explicitly in an
UPDATE statement and some
other column changes value. An
UPDATE that sets a column
to the value it does not cause the
TIMESTAMP column to be
updated; if you set a column to its current value, MySQL
ignores the update for efficiency.
A TIMESTAMP column other than
the first also can be assigned the current date and time by
setting it to NULL or to any function that
produces the current date and time
(NOW(),
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP).
Note that the information in the following discussion applies
to TIMESTAMP columns only for
tables not created with
MAXDB mode enabled, because
such columns are created as
DATETIME columns.
You can set any TIMESTAMP
column to a value different from the current date and time by
setting it explicitly to the desired value. This is true even
for the first TIMESTAMP column.
You can use this property if, for example, you want a
TIMESTAMP to be set to the
current date and time when you create a row, but not to be
changed whenever the row is updated later:
Let MySQL set the column when the row is created. This initializes it to the current date and time.
When you perform subsequent updates to other columns in
the row, set the TIMESTAMP
column explicitly to its current value:
UPDATEtbl_nameSETtimestamp_col=timestamp_col,other_col1=new_value1,other_col2=new_value2, ...
Another way to maintain a column that records row-creation
time is to use a DATETIME
column that you initialize to
NOW() when the row is created
and do not modify for subsequent updates.
TIMESTAMP values may range from
the beginning of 1970 to partway through the year 2038, with a
resolution of one second. Values are displayed as numbers.
When you store a value in a
TIMESTAMP column, it is assumed
to be represented in the current time zone, and is converted
to UTC for storage. When you retrieve the value, it is
converted from UTC back to the local time zone for display.
Before MySQL 4.1.3, the server has a single time zone. As of
4.1.3, clients can set their own time zones on a
per-connection basis, as described in
Section 9.7, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
Prior to version 4.1, the format in which MySQL retrieves and
displays TIMESTAMP values
depends on the display size, as illustrated in the following
table. The “full”
TIMESTAMP format is 14 digits,
but TIMESTAMP columns may be
created with shorter display sizes.
| Data Type | Display Format |
|---|---|
TIMESTAMP(14) | YYYYMMDDHHMMSS |
TIMESTAMP(12) | YYMMDDHHMMSS |
TIMESTAMP(10) | YYMMDDHHMM |
TIMESTAMP(8) | YYYYMMDD |
TIMESTAMP(6) | YYMMDD |
TIMESTAMP(4) | YYMM |
TIMESTAMP(2) | YY |
All TIMESTAMP columns have the
same storage size, regardless of display size. The most common
display sizes are 6, 8, 12, and 14. You can specify an
arbitrary display size at table creation time, but values of 0
or greater than 14 are coerced to 14. Odd-valued sizes in the
range from 1 to 13 are coerced to the next higher even number.
TIMESTAMP columns store legal
values using the full precision with which the value was
specified, regardless of the display size. This has several
implications:
Always specify year, month, and day, even if your column
types are TIMESTAMP(4) or
TIMESTAMP(2). Otherwise, the value is
not a legal date and 0 is stored.
If you use ALTER TABLE to
widen a narrow TIMESTAMP
column, information is displayed that previously was
“hidden.”
Similarly, narrowing a
TIMESTAMP column does not
cause information to be lost, except in the sense that
less information is shown when the values are displayed.
If you are planning to use mysqldump
for the database, do not use
TIMESTAMP(4) or
TIMESTAMP(2). The display format for
these data types are not legal dates and
0 will be stored instead. This
inconsistency is fixed starting with MySQL 4.1, where
display width is ignored. To prepare for transition to
versions after 4.0, you should change to use display
widths of 6 or more, which will produce a legal display
format. You can change the display width of
TIMESTAMP data types,
without losing any information, by using
ALTER TABLE as indicated
above.
If you need to print the timestamps for external
applications, you can use
MID() to extract the
relevant part of the timestamp: for example, to imitate
the TIMESTAMP(4) display format.
Although TIMESTAMP values
are stored to full precision, the only function that
operates directly on the underlying stored value is
UNIX_TIMESTAMP(). Other
functions operate on the formatted retrieved value. This
means you cannot use a function such as
HOUR() or
SECOND() unless the
relevant part of the
TIMESTAMP value is included
in the formatted value. For example, the
HH part of a
TIMESTAMP column is not
displayed unless the display size is at least 10, so
trying to use HOUR() on
shorter TIMESTAMP values
produces a meaningless result.
In MySQL 4.1, TIMESTAMP display
format changes to be the same as
DATETIME, that is, as a string
in 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS' format rather than
as a number in YYYYMMDDHHMMSS format. To
test applications written for MySQL 4.0 for compatibility with
this change, you can set the
new system variable to 1.
This variable is available beginning with MySQL 4.0.12. It can
be set at server startup by specifying the
--new option to mysqld. At
runtime, a user who has the
SUPER privilege can set the
global value with a
SET
statement:
mysql> SET GLOBAL new = 1;
Any client can set its session value of
new as follows:
mysql> SET new = 1;
The general effect of setting
new to 1 is that values for
existing TIMESTAMP columns
display as strings rather than as numbers. Also,
DESCRIBE displays the column
definition as TIMESTAMP(19),
rather than as TIMESTAMP(14).
The effect differs somewhat for
TIMESTAMP columns that are
created while new is set to
1. In this case, column values display as strings and
DESCRIBE shows the definition
as TIMESTAMP(19), regardless of
the current value of new.
In other words, with new=1, all
TIMESTAMP values display as
strings and DESCRIBE shows a
display width of 19. For columns created while
new=1, they continue to display as strings
and to have a display width of 19 even if
new is set to 0.
For a TIMESTAMP column that
displays as a string, you can display it as a number by
retrieving it as
.
col_name+0
In MySQL 4.1 and up, the properties of the
TIMESTAMP data type changed in
several ways. The following discussion describes the revised
syntax and behavior.
Beginning with MySQL 4.1.3, the default current time zone for
each connection is the server's time. The time zone can be set
on a per-connection basis, as described in
Section 9.7, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
TIMESTAMP values still are
stored in UTC, but are converted from the current time zone
for storage, and converted back to the current time zone for
retrieval. As long as the time zone setting remains constant,
you get back the same value you store. If you store a
TIMESTAMP value, and then
change the time zone and retrieve the value, the retrieved
value is different from the value you stored. This occurs
because the same time zone was not used for conversion in both
directions. The current time zone is available as the value of
the time_zone system
variable.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, TIMESTAMP
display format differs from that of earlier MySQL releases:
TIMESTAMP columns are
displayed in the same format as
DATETIME columns. In other
words, the display width is fixed at 19 characters, and
the format is 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS'.
Display widths (used as described in the preceding
section) are no longer supported. In other words, for
declarations such as TIMESTAMP(2),
TIMESTAMP(4), and so on, the display
width is ignored.
The following items summarize
TIMESTAMP initialization and
updating properties prior to MySQL 4.1.2:
The first TIMESTAMP column
in table row automatically is set to the current timestamp
when the record is created if the column is set to
NULL or is not specified at all.
The first TIMESTAMP column
in table row automatically is updated to the current
timestamp when the value of any other column in the row is
changed, unless the
TIMESTAMP column explicitly
is assigned a value other than NULL.
If a DEFAULT value is specified for the
first TIMESTAMP column when
the table is created, it is silently ignored.
Other TIMESTAMP columns in
the table can be set to the current
TIMESTAMP by assigning
NULL to them, but they do not update
automatically.
Beginning with MySQL 4.1.2, you have more flexible control
over when automatic TIMESTAMP
initialization and updating occur and which column should have
those behaviors:
For one TIMESTAMP column in
a table, you can assign the current timestamp as the
default value and the auto-update value. It is possible to
have the current timestamp be the default value for
initializing the column, for the auto-update value, or
both. It is not possible to have the current timestamp be
the default value for one column and the auto-update value
for another column.
Any single TIMESTAMP column
in a table can be used as the one that is initialized to
the current date and time, or updated automatically. This
need not be the first
TIMESTAMP column.
In a CREATE TABLE
statement, the first
TIMESTAMP column can be
declared in any of the following ways:
With both DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
and ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
clauses, the column has the current timestamp for its
default value, and is automatically updated.
With neither DEFAULT nor
ON UPDATE clauses, it is the same
as DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP.
With a DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
clause and no ON UPDATE clause, the
column has the current timestamp for its default value
but is not automatically updated.
With no DEFAULT clause and with an
ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP clause,
the column has a default of 0 and is automatically
updated.
With a constant DEFAULT value, the
column has the given default and is not automatically
initialized to the current timestamp. If the column
also has an ON UPDATE
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP clause, it is
automatically updated; otherwise, it has a constant
default and is not automatically updated.
In other words, you can use the current timestamp for both
the initial value and the auto-update value, or either
one, or neither. (For example, you can specify ON
UPDATE to enable auto-update without also having
the column auto-initialized.) The following column
definitions demonstrate each possibility:
Auto-initialization and auto-update:
ts TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
Auto-initialization only:
ts TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
Auto-update only:
ts TIMESTAMP DEFAULT 0 ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
Neither:
ts TIMESTAMP DEFAULT 0
To specify automatic default or updating for a
TIMESTAMP column other than
the first one, you must suppress the automatic
initialization and update behaviors for the first
TIMESTAMP column by
explicitly assigning it a constant
DEFAULT value (for example,
DEFAULT 0 or DEFAULT
'2003-01-01 00:00:00'). Then, for the other
TIMESTAMP column, the rules
are the same as for the first
TIMESTAMP column, except
that if you omit both of the DEFAULT
and ON UPDATE clauses, no automatic
initialization or updating occurs.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t (
ts1 TIMESTAMP DEFAULT 0,
ts2 TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP or any of
its synonyms
(CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(),
NOW(),
LOCALTIME,
LOCALTIME(),
LOCALTIMESTAMP, or
LOCALTIMESTAMP()) can be
used in the DEFAULT and ON
UPDATE clauses. They all mean “the current
timestamp.”
UTC_TIMESTAMP is not
permitted. Its range of values does not align with those
of the TIMESTAMP column
except when the current time zone is
UTC.
The order of the DEFAULT and
ON UPDATE clauses does not matter. If
both DEFAULT and ON
UPDATE are specified for a
TIMESTAMP column, either
can precede the other. For example, these statements are
equivalent:
CREATE TABLE t (ts TIMESTAMP);
CREATE TABLE t (ts TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
CREATE TABLE t (ts TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
The following rules describe the changes in MySQL 4.1
regarding TIMESTAMP and
handling of NULL values:
Before MySQL 4.1.2,
TIMESTAMP columns are
NOT NULL. They cannot contain
NULL values, and assigning
NULL assigns the current timestamp. Any
DEFAULT clause is ignored.
From MySQL 4.1.2 to 4.1.5,
TIMESTAMP columns are
NOT NULL. They cannot contain
NULL values, and assigning
NULL assigns the current timestamp. A
DEFAULT NULL clause can be specified,
but it is treated as DEFAULT
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP for the first
TIMESTAMP column and as
DEFAULT 0 for other
TIMESTAMP columns.
As of MySQL 4.1.6,
TIMESTAMP columns are
NOT NULL by default, cannot contain
NULL values, and assigning
NULL assigns the current timestamp.
However, a TIMESTAMP column
can be permitted to contain NULL by
declaring it with the NULL attribute.
In this case, the default value also becomes
NULL unless overridden with a
DEFAULT clause that specifies a
different default value. DEFAULT NULL
can be used to explicitly specify NULL
as the default value. (For a
TIMESTAMP column not
declared with the NULL attribute,
DEFAULT NULL is illegal.) If a
TIMESTAMP column permits
NULL values, assigning
NULL sets it to
NULL, not to the current timestamp.
The following table contains several
TIMESTAMP columns that permit
NULL values:
CREATE TABLE t ( ts1 TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT NULL, ts2 TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT 0, ts3 TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP );
Note that a TIMESTAMP column
that permits NULL values will
not take on the current timestamp except
under one of the following conditions:
Its default value is defined as
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
NOW() or
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is
inserted into the column
In other words, a TIMESTAMP
column defined as NULL will auto-initialize
only if it is created using a definition such as the
following:
CREATE TABLE t (ts TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
Otherwise—that is, if the
TIMESTAMP column is defined to
permit NULL values but not using
DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, as shown
here…
CREATE TABLE t1 (ts TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT NULL); CREATE TABLE t2 (ts TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT '0000-00-00 00:00:00');
…then you must explicitly insert a value corresponding to the current date and time. For example:
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (NOW()); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
Beginning with MySQL 4.1.1, the MySQL server can be run with
the MAXDB SQL mode
enabled. When the server runs with this mode enabled,
TIMESTAMP is identical with
DATETIME. That is, if this
mode is enabled at the time that a table is created,
TIMESTAMP columns are created
as DATETIME columns. As a
result, such columns use
DATETIME display format, have
the same range of values, and there is no automatic
initialization or updating to the current date and time.
To enable MAXDB mode, set
the server SQL mode to MAXDB
at startup using the
--sql-mode=MAXDB server option
or by setting the global
sql_mode variable at runtime:
mysql> SET GLOBAL sql_mode=MAXDB;
A client can cause the server to run in
MAXDB mode for its own
connection as follows:
mysql> SET SESSION sql_mode=MAXDB;
MySQL retrieves and displays TIME
values in 'HH:MM:SS' format (or
'HHH:MM:SS' format for large hours values).
TIME values may range from
'-838:59:59' to
'838:59:59'. The hours part may be so large
because the TIME type can be used
not only to represent a time of day (which must be less than 24
hours), but also elapsed time or a time interval between two
events (which may be much greater than 24 hours, or even
negative).
MySQL recognizes TIME values in
several formats, described in
Section 8.1.3, “Date and Time Literals”. Some of these formats
can include a trailing fractional seconds part in up to
microseconds (6 digits) precision. Although this fractional part
is recognized, it is discarded from values stored into
TIME columns. For information
about fractional seconds support in MySQL, see
Section 10.3.4, “Fractional Seconds in Time Values”.
Be careful about assigning abbreviated values to a
TIME column. MySQL interprets
abbreviated TIME values with
colons as time of the day. That is, '11:12'
means '11:12:00', not
'00:11:12'. MySQL interprets abbreviated
values without colons using the assumption that the two
rightmost digits represent seconds (that is, as elapsed time
rather than as time of day). For example, you might think of
'1112' and 1112 as meaning
'11:12:00' (12 minutes after 11 o'clock), but
MySQL interprets them as '00:11:12' (11
minutes, 12 seconds). Similarly, '12' and
12 are interpreted as
'00:00:12'.
By default, values that lie outside the
TIME range but are otherwise
legal are clipped to the closest endpoint of the range. For
example, '-850:00:00' and
'850:00:00' are converted to
'-838:59:59' and
'838:59:59'. Illegal
TIME values are converted to
'00:00:00'. Note that because
'00:00:00' is itself a legal
TIME value, there is no way to
tell, from a value of '00:00:00' stored in a
table, whether the original value was specified as
'00:00:00' or whether it was illegal.
For more restrictive treatment of invalid
TIME values, enable strict SQL
mode to cause errors to occur. See
Section 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”.
The YEAR type is a one-byte type
used for representing years. It can be declared as
YEAR(2) or YEAR(4) to
specify a display width of two or four characters. The default
is four characters if no width is given.
For four-digit format, MySQL displays
YEAR values in
YYYY format, with a range of
1901 to 2155, or
0000. For two-digit format, MySQL displays
only the last two (least significant) digits; for example,
70 (1970 or 2070) or 69
(2069).
You can specify input YEAR values
in a variety of formats:
As a four-digit string in the range
'1901' to '2155'.
As a four-digit number in the range 1901
to 2155.
As a two-digit string in the range '00'
to '99'. Values in the ranges
'00' to '69' and
'70' to '99' are
converted to YEAR values in
the ranges 2000 to
2069 and 1970 to
1999.
As a two-digit number in the range 1 to
99. Values in the ranges
1 to 69 and
70 to 99 are converted
to YEAR values in the ranges
2001 to 2069 and
1970 to 1999. Note
that the range for two-digit numbers is slightly different
from the range for two-digit strings, because you cannot
specify zero directly as a number and have it be interpreted
as 2000. You must specify it as a string
'0' or '00' or it is
interpreted as 0000.
As the result of a function that returns a value that is
acceptable in a YEAR context,
such as NOW().
Illegal YEAR values are converted
to 0000.
A trailing fractional seconds part is permissible for temporal values in contexts such as literal values, and in the arguments to or return values from some temporal functions. Example:
mysql> SELECT MICROSECOND('2010-12-10 14:12:09.019473');
+-------------------------------------------+
| MICROSECOND('2010-12-10 14:12:09.019473') |
+-------------------------------------------+
| 19473 |
+-------------------------------------------+
However, when MySQL stores a value into a column of any temporal data type, it discards any fractional part and does not store it.
To some extent, you can convert a value from one temporal type
to another. However, there may be some alteration of the value
or loss of information. In all cases, conversion between
temporal types is subject to the range of legal values for the
resulting type. For example, although
DATE,
DATETIME, and
TIMESTAMP values all can be
specified using the same set of formats, the types do not all
have the same range of values.
TIMESTAMP values cannot be
earlier than 1970 UTC or later than
'2038-01-19 03:14:07' UTC. This means that a
date such as '1968-01-01', while legal as a
DATE or
DATETIME value, is not valid as a
TIMESTAMP value and is converted
to 0.
Conversion of DATE values:
Conversion of DATETIME and
TIMESTAMP values:
Conversion of TIME values:
MySQL converts a time value to a date or date-and-time value by
parsing the string value of the time as a date or date-and-time.
This is unlikely to be useful. For example,
'23:12:31' interpreted as a date becomes
'2032-12-31'. Time values not valid as dates
become '0000-00-00' or
NULL.
As of MySQL 4.1.13, conversion of
TIME or
DATETIME values to numeric form
(for example, by adding +0) results in a
double-precision value with a microseconds part of
.000000:
mysql>SELECT CURTIME(), CURTIME()+0;+-----------+---------------+ | CURTIME() | CURTIME()+0 | +-----------+---------------+ | 10:41:36 | 104136.000000 | +-----------+---------------+ mysql>SELECT NOW(), NOW()+0;+---------------------+-----------------------+ | NOW() | NOW()+0 | +---------------------+-----------------------+ | 2007-11-30 10:41:47 | 20071130104147.000000 | +---------------------+-----------------------+
Before MySQL 4.1.13, the conversion results in an integer value with no microseconds part.
Date values with two-digit years are ambiguous because the century is unknown. Such values must be interpreted into four-digit form because MySQL stores years internally using four digits.
For DATETIME,
DATE,
TIMESTAMP, and
YEAR types, MySQL interprets
dates specified with ambiguous year values using these rules:
Year values in the range 00-69 are
converted to 2000-2069.
Year values in the range 70-99 are
converted to 1970-1999.
Remember that these rules are only heuristics that provide reasonable guesses as to what your data values mean. If the rules used by MySQL do not produce the values you require, you must provide unambiguous input containing four-digit year values.
In MySQL, the YEAR data type can
store the years 0 and 1901
to 2155 in one byte and display them using
two or four digits. All two-digit years are considered to be in
the range 1970 to 2069,
which means that if you store 01 in a
YEAR column, MySQL Server treats
it as 2001.
ORDER BY properly sorts
YEAR values that have two-digit
years.
Some functions like MIN() and
MAX() convert a
YEAR to a number. This means that
a value with a two-digit year does not work properly with these
functions. The fix in this case is to convert the
YEAR to four-digit year format.
The string types are CHAR,
VARCHAR,
BINARY,
VARBINARY,
BLOB,
TEXT,
ENUM, and
SET. This section describes how
these types work and how to use them in your queries. For string
type storage requirements, see
Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
The CHAR and
VARCHAR types are similar, but
differ in the way they are stored and retrieved.
The CHAR and
VARCHAR types are declared with a
length that indicates the maximum number of characters you want
to store. For example, CHAR(30) can hold up
to 30 characters. (Before MySQL 4.1, the length is interpreted
as number of bytes.)
The length of a CHAR column is
fixed to the length that you declare when you create the table.
The length can be any value from 0 to 255. (Before MySQL 3.23,
the length of CHAR may be from 1
to 255.) When CHAR values are
stored, they are right-padded with spaces to the specified
length. When CHAR values are
retrieved, trailing spaces are removed.
Values in VARCHAR columns are
variable-length strings. The length can be specified as a value
from 1 to 255 before MySQL 4.0.2 and 0 to 255 as of MySQL 4.0.2.
In contrast to CHAR,
VARCHAR values are stored as a
one-byte length prefix plus data. The length prefix indicates
the number of bytes in the value.
If you assign a value to a CHAR
or VARCHAR column that exceeds
the column's maximum length, the value is truncated to fit. If
the truncated characters are not spaces, a warning is generated.
VARCHAR values are not padded
when they are stored. Trailing spaces in MySQL version up to and
including 4.1 are removed from values when stored in a
VARCHAR column; this also means
that the spaces are absent from retrieved values.
If you need a data type for which trailing spaces are not
removed, consider using a BLOB or
TEXT type. If you want to store
binary values such as results from an encryption or compression
function that might contain arbitrary byte values, use a
BLOB column rather than a
CHAR or
VARCHAR column, to avoid
potential problems with trailing space removal that would change
data values.
The following table illustrates the differences between
CHAR and
VARCHAR by showing the result of
storing various string values into CHAR(4)
and VARCHAR(4) columns (assuming that the
column uses a single-byte character set such as
latin1).
| Value | CHAR(4) | Storage Required | VARCHAR(4) | Storage Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
'' | ' ' | 4 bytes | '' | 1 byte |
'ab' | 'ab ' | 4 bytes | 'ab' | 3 bytes |
'abcd' | 'abcd' | 4 bytes | 'abcd' | 5 bytes |
'abcdefgh' | 'abcd' | 4 bytes | 'abcd' | 5 bytes |
If a given value is stored into the CHAR(4)
and VARCHAR(4) columns, the values retrieved
from the columns are not always the same because trailing spaces
are removed from CHAR columns
upon retrieval.
As of MySQL 4.1, values in CHAR
and VARCHAR columns are sorted
and compared according to the character set collation assigned
to the column. Before MySQL 4.1, sorting and comparison are
based on the collation of the server character set; you can
declare the column with the BINARY attribute
to cause sorting and comparison to be based on the numeric
values of the bytes in column values. BINARY
does not affect how column values are stored or retrieved.
All MySQL collations are of type PADSPACE.
This means that all CHAR and
VARCHAR values in MySQL are
compared without regard to any trailing spaces. For example:
mysql>CREATE TABLE names (myname CHAR(10), yourname VARCHAR(10));Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.09 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO names VALUES ('Monty ', 'Monty ');Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT myname = 'Monty ', yourname = 'Monty ' FROM names;+--------------------+----------------------+ | myname = 'Monty ' | yourname = 'Monty ' | +--------------------+----------------------+ | 1 | 1 | +--------------------+----------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
This is true for all MySQL versions, and it makes no difference
whether your version trims trailing spaces from
VARCHAR values before storing
them. Nor does the server SQL mode make any difference in this
regard.
For more information about MySQL character sets and collations, see Section 9.1, “Character Set Support”.
For those cases where trailing pad characters are stripped or
comparisons ignore them, if a column has an index that requires
unique values, inserting into the column values that differ only
in number of trailing pad characters will result in a
duplicate-key error. For example, if a table contains
'a', an attempt to store
'a ' causes a duplicate-key error.
The BINARY attribute is sticky. This means
that if a column marked BINARY is used in an
expression, the whole expression is treated as a
BINARY value.
MySQL may silently change the type of a
CHAR or
VARCHAR column at table creation
time. See Section 12.1.5.2, “Silent Column Specification Changes”.
The BINARY and
VARBINARY types are similar to
CHAR and
VARCHAR, except that they contain
binary strings rather than nonbinary strings. That is, they
contain byte strings rather than character strings. This means
that they have no character set, and sorting and comparison are
based on the numeric values of the bytes in the values.
The permissible maximum length is the same for
BINARY and
VARBINARY as it is for
CHAR and
VARCHAR, except that the length
for BINARY and
VARBINARY is a length in bytes
rather than in characters.
Before MySQL 4.1.2,
BINARY( and
M)VARBINARY( are
treated as M)CHAR( and
M)
BINARYVARCHAR(.
As of MySQL 4.1.2, the M) BINARYBINARY and
VARBINARY data types are distinct
from the CHAR BINARY and VARCHAR
BINARY data types. For the latter types, the
BINARY attribute does not cause the column to
be treated as a binary string column. Instead, it causes the
binary collation for the column character set to be used, and
the column itself contains nonbinary character strings rather
than binary byte strings. For example, in 4.1.2 and up,
CHAR(5) BINARY is treated as CHAR(5)
CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_bin, assuming that
the default character set is latin1. This
differs from BINARY(5), which stores 5-bytes
binary strings that have no character set or collation. For
information about differences between nonbinary string binary
collations and binary strings, see
Section 9.1.7.6, “The _bin and binary Collations”.
If you assign a value to a BINARY
or VARBINARY column that exceeds
the column's maximum length, the value is truncated to fit. If
the truncated characters are not spaces, a warning is generated.
The handling of trailing spaces is the same for
BINARY and
VARBINARY as it is for
CHAR and
VARCHAR. When
BINARY values are stored, they
are right-padded with spaces to the specified length. When
BINARY values are retrieved,
trailing spaces are removed. For
VARBINARY, trailing spaces are
removed when values are stored.
For those cases where trailing pad bytes are stripped or
comparisons ignore them, if a column has an index that requires
unique values, inserting into the column values that differ only
in number of trailing pad bytes will result in a duplicate-key
error. For example, if a table contains 'a',
an attempt to store 'a ' causes a
duplicate-key error. Trailing spaces are significant in
comparisons.
You should consider the preceding padding and stripping
characteristics carefully if you plan to use one of these data
types for storing binary data and you require that the value
retrieved be exactly the same as the value stored. The following
example illustrates how space-padding of
BINARY values affects column
value comparisons:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t (c BINARY(3));Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO t SET c = 'a ';Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT HEX(c), c = 'a', c = 'a ' from t;+--------+---------+-----------+ | HEX(c) | c = 'a' | c = 'a ' | +--------+---------+-----------+ | 61 | 1 | 0 | +--------+---------+-----------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
If the value retrieved must be the same as the value specified
for storage with no padding, it might be preferable to use one
of the BLOB data types instead.
A BLOB is a binary large object
that can hold a variable amount of data. The four
BLOB types are
TINYBLOB,
BLOB,
MEDIUMBLOB, and
LONGBLOB. These differ only in
the maximum length of the values they can hold. The four
TEXT types are
TINYTEXT,
TEXT,
MEDIUMTEXT, and
LONGTEXT. These
correspond to the four BLOB types
and have the same maximum lengths and storage requirements. See
Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”.
BLOB values are treated as binary
strings (byte strings). They have no character set, and sorting
and comparison are based on the numeric values of the bytes in
column values. TEXT values are
treated as nonbinary strings (character strings). They have a
character set, and values are sorted and compared based on the
collation of the character set assigned to the column as of
MySQL 4.1. Before 4.1, TEXT
sorting and comparison are based on the collation of the server
character set.
If you assign a value to a BLOB
or TEXT column that exceeds the
data type's maximum length, the value is truncated to fit and a
warning is generated.
If a TEXT or
BLOB column is indexed, index
entry comparisons are not space-padded at the end. This means
that, if the index requires unique values, duplicate-key errors
will not occur for values that differ only in the number of
trailing spaces. For example, if a table contains
'a', an attempt to store
'a ' does not cause a duplicate-key
error. (This behavior changes in MySQL 5.0 for
TEXT columns, such that
comparisons are space-padded.)
In most respects, you can regard a
BLOB column as a
VARBINARY column that can be as
big as you like. Similarly, you can regard a
TEXT column as a
VARCHAR column.
BLOB and
TEXT differ from
VARBINARY and
VARCHAR in the following ways:
There is no trailing-space removal for
BLOB and
TEXT columns when values are
stored or retrieved. This differs from
VARBINARY and
VARCHAR, for which trailing
spaces are removed when values are stored.
On comparisons, TEXT is space
extended to fit the compared object, exactly like
CHAR and
VARCHAR.
You can have indexes on BLOB
and TEXT columns only as of
MySQL 3.23.2 for MyISAM tables or MySQL
4.0.14 for InnoDB tables. Previous
versions of MySQL did not support indexing these data types.
For indexes on BLOB and
TEXT columns, you must
specify an index prefix length. For
CHAR and
VARCHAR, a prefix length is
optional. See Section 7.4.1, “Column Indexes”.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, LONG and LONG
VARCHAR map to the
MEDIUMTEXT data type. This is a
compatibility feature. If you use the BINARY
attribute with a TEXT data type,
the column is assigned the binary collation of the column
character set.
MySQL Connector/ODBC defines BLOB
values as LONGVARBINARY and
TEXT values as
LONGVARCHAR.
Because BLOB and
TEXT values can be extremely
long, you might encounter some constraints in using them:
Only the first
max_sort_length bytes of
the column are used when sorting. The default value of
max_sort_length is 1024.
This value can be changed using the
--max_sort_length=
option when starting the mysqld server.
See Section 5.1.3, “Server System Variables”.
N
As of MySQL 4.0.3, you can make more bytes significant in
sorting or grouping by increasing the value of
max_sort_length at runtime.
Any client can change the value of its session
max_sort_length variable:
mysql>SET max_sort_length = 2000;mysql>SELECT id, comment FROM t->ORDER BY comment;
Another way to use GROUP BY or
ORDER BY on a
BLOB or
TEXT column containing long
values when you want more than
max_sort_length bytes to be
significant is to convert the column value into a
fixed-length object. The standard way to do this is with the
SUBSTRING() function. For
example, the following statement causes 2000 bytes of the
comment column to be taken into account
for sorting:
mysql>SELECT id, SUBSTRING(comment,1,2000) FROM t->ORDER BY SUBSTRING(comment,1,2000);
Before MySQL 3.23.2, you can group on an expression
involving BLOB or
TEXT values by using a column
alias or by specifying the column position:
mysql>SELECT id, SUBSTRING(comment,1,2000) AS b->FROMmysql>tbl_nameGROUP BY b;SELECT id, SUBSTRING(comment,1,2000)->FROMtbl_nameGROUP BY 2;
Instances of BLOB or
TEXT columns in the result of
a query that is processed using a temporary table causes the
server to use a table on disk rather than in memory because
the MEMORY storage engine does not
support those data types (see
Section 7.7.4, “How MySQL Uses Internal Temporary Tables”). Use of disk
incurs a performance penalty, so include
BLOB or
TEXT columns in the query
result only if they are really needed. For example, avoid
using SELECT
*, which selects all columns.
The maximum size of a BLOB or
TEXT object is determined by
its type, but the largest value you actually can transmit
between the client and server is determined by the amount of
available memory and the size of the communications buffers.
You can change the message buffer size by changing the value
of the max_allowed_packet
variable, but you must do so for both the server and your
client program. For example, both mysql
and mysqldump enable you to change the
client-side
max_allowed_packet value.
See Section 7.8.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”,
Section 4.5.1, “mysql — The MySQL Command-Line Tool”, and Section 4.5.4, “mysqldump — A Database Backup Program”.
You may also want to compare the packet sizes and the size
of the data objects you are storing with the storage
requirements, see Section 10.5, “Data Type Storage Requirements”
Each BLOB or
TEXT value is represented
internally by a separately allocated object. This is in contrast
to all other data types, for which storage is allocated once per
column when the table is opened.
In some cases, it may be desirable to store binary data such as
media files in BLOB or
TEXT columns. You may find
MySQL's string handling functions useful for working with such
data. See Section 11.5, “String Functions”. For security and
other reasons, it is usually preferable to do so using
application code rather than giving application users the
FILE privilege. You can discuss
specifics for various languages and platforms in the MySQL
Forums (http://forums.mysql.com/).
An ENUM is a string object with a
value chosen from a list of permitted values that are enumerated
explicitly in the column specification at table creation time.
An enumeration value must be a quoted string literal; it may not
be an expression, even one that evaluates to a string value. For
example, you can create a table with an
ENUM column like this:
CREATE TABLE sizes (
name ENUM('small', 'medium', 'large')
);
However, this version of the previous
CREATE TABLE statement does
not work:
CREATE TABLE sizes (
c1 ENUM('small', CONCAT('med','ium'), 'large')
);
You also may not employ a user variable as an enumeration value. This pair of statements do not work:
SET @mysize = 'medium';
CREATE TABLE sizes (
name ENUM('small', @mysize, 'large')
);
If you wish to use a number as an enumeration value, you must enclose it in quotation marks.
The value may also be the empty string ('')
or NULL under certain circumstances:
If you insert an invalid value into an
ENUM (that is, a string not
present in the list of permitted values), the empty string
is inserted instead as a special error value. This string
can be distinguished from a “normal” empty
string by the fact that this string has the numeric value 0.
More about this later.
If strict SQL mode is enabled, attempts to insert invalid
ENUM values result in an
error.
If an ENUM column is declared
to permit NULL, the
NULL value is a legal value for the
column, and the default value is NULL. If
an ENUM column is declared
NOT NULL, its default value is the first
element of the list of permitted values.
Each enumeration value has an index:
Values from the list of permissible elements in the column specification are numbered beginning with 1.
The index value of the empty string error value is 0. This
means that you can use the following
SELECT statement to find rows
into which invalid ENUM
values were assigned:
mysql> SELECT * FROM tbl_name WHERE enum_col=0;
The index of the NULL value is
NULL.
The term “index” here refers only to position within the list of enumeration values. It has nothing to do with table indexes.
For example, a column specified as ENUM('one', 'two',
'three') can have any of the values shown here. The
index of each value is also shown.
| Value | Index |
|---|---|
NULL | NULL |
'' | 0 |
'one' | 1 |
'two' | 2 |
'three' | 3 |
An enumeration can have a maximum of 65,535 elements.
Starting from MySQL 3.23.51, trailing spaces are automatically
deleted from ENUM member values
in the table definition when a table is created.
When retrieved, values stored into an
ENUM column are displayed using
the lettercase that was used in the column definition. Before
MySQL 4.1.1, lettercase is irrelevant when you assign values to
an ENUM column. As of 4.1.1,
ENUM columns can be assigned a
character set and collation. For binary or case-sensitive
collations, lettercase does matter when you assign values to the
column.
If you retrieve an ENUM value in
a numeric context, the column value's index is returned. For
example, you can retrieve numeric values from an
ENUM column like this:
mysql> SELECT enum_col+0 FROM tbl_name;
If you store a number into an
ENUM column, the number is
treated as the index into the possible values, and the value
stored is the enumeration member with that index. (However, this
does not work with
LOAD DATA, which treats all input
as strings.) If the numeric value is quoted, it is still
interpreted as an index if there is no matching string in the
list of enumeration values. For these reasons, it is not
advisable to define an ENUM
column with enumeration values that look like numbers, because
this can easily become confusing. For example, the following
column has enumeration members with string values of
'0', '1', and
'2', but numeric index values of
1, 2, and
3:
numbers ENUM('0','1','2')
If you store 2, it is interpreted as an index
value, and becomes '1' (the value with index
2). If you store '2', it matches an
enumeration value, so it is stored as '2'. If
you store '3', it does not match any
enumeration value, so it is treated as an index and becomes
'2' (the value with index 3).
mysql>INSERT INTO t (numbers) VALUES(2),('2'),('3');mysql>SELECT * FROM t;+---------+ | numbers | +---------+ | 1 | | 2 | | 2 | +---------+
ENUM values are sorted according
to the order in which the enumeration members were listed in the
column specification. (In other words,
ENUM values are sorted according
to their index numbers.) For example, 'a'
sorts before 'b' for ENUM('a',
'b'), but 'b' sorts before
'a' for ENUM('b', 'a').
The empty string sorts before nonempty strings, and
NULL values sort before all other enumeration
values. If you expect sorting to be done alphabetically, you
should specify the ENUM list in
alphabetic order. You can also use GROUP BY CAST(col AS
CHAR) or GROUP BY CONCAT(col) to
make sure that the column is sorted lexically rather than by
index number.
Functions such as SUM() or
AVG() that expect a numeric
argument cast the argument to a number if necessary. For
ENUM values, the cast operation
causes the index number to be used.
If you want to determine all possible values for an
ENUM column, use SHOW
COLUMNS FROM and parse the
tbl_name LIKE
enum_colENUM definition in the
Type column of the output.
A SET is a string object that can
have zero or more values, each of which must be chosen from a
list of permitted values specified when the table is created.
SET column values that consist of
multiple set members are specified with members separated by
commas (“,”). A consequence of
this is that SET member values
should not themselves contain commas.
For example, a column specified as SET('one', 'two')
NOT NULL can have any of these values:
'' 'one' 'two' 'one,two'
A SET can have a maximum of 64
different members.
Starting from MySQL 3.23.51, trailing spaces are automatically
deleted from SET member values in
the table definition when a table is created.
When retrieved, values stored into a
SET column are displayed using
the lettercase that was used in the column definition. Before
MySQL 4.1.1, lettercase is irrelevant when you assign values to
an SET column. As of 4.1.1,
SET columns can be assigned a
character set and collation. For binary or case-sensitive
collations, lettercase does matter when you assign values to the
column.
MySQL stores SET values
numerically, with the low-order bit of the stored value
corresponding to the first set member. If you retrieve a
SET value in a numeric context,
the value retrieved has bits set corresponding to the set
members that make up the column value. For example, you can
retrieve numeric values from a
SET column like this:
mysql> SELECT set_col+0 FROM tbl_name;
If a number is stored into a SET
column, the bits that are set in the binary representation of
the number determine the set members in the column value. For a
column specified as SET('a','b','c','d'), the
members have the following decimal and binary values.
SET Member | Decimal Value | Binary Value |
|---|---|---|
'a' | 1 | 0001 |
'b' | 2 | 0010 |
'c' | 4 | 0100 |
'd' | 8 | 1000 |
If you assign a value of 9 to this column,
that is 1001 in binary, the first and fourth
SET members
'a' and 'd' are selected
and the resulting value is 'a,d'.
For a value containing more than one
SET element, it does not matter
what order the elements are listed in when you insert the value.
It also does not matter how many times a given element is listed
in the value. When the value is retrieved later, each element in
the value appears once, with elements listed according to the
order in which they were specified at table creation time. For
example, suppose that a column is specified as
SET('a','b','c','d'):
mysql> CREATE TABLE myset (col SET('a', 'b', 'c', 'd'));
If you insert the values 'a,d',
'd,a', 'a,d,d',
'a,d,a', and 'd,a,d':
mysql> INSERT INTO myset (col) VALUES
-> ('a,d'), ('d,a'), ('a,d,a'), ('a,d,d'), ('d,a,d');
Query OK, 5 rows affected (0.01 sec)
Records: 5 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
Then all these values appear as 'a,d' when
retrieved:
mysql> SELECT col FROM myset;
+------+
| col |
+------+
| a,d |
| a,d |
| a,d |
| a,d |
| a,d |
+------+
5 rows in set (0.04 sec)
If you set a SET column to an
unsupported value, the value is ignored and a warning is issued:
mysql>INSERT INTO myset (col) VALUES ('a,d,d,s');Query OK, 1 row affected, 1 warning (0.03 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;+---------+------+------------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +---------+------+------------------------------------------+ | Warning | 1265 | Data truncated for column 'col' at row 1 | +---------+------+------------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.04 sec) mysql>SELECT col FROM myset;+------+ | col | +------+ | a,d | | a,d | | a,d | | a,d | | a,d | | a,d | +------+ 6 rows in set (0.01 sec)
If strict SQL mode is enabled, attempts to insert invalid
SET values result in an error.
SET values are sorted
numerically. NULL values sort before
non-NULL SET
values.
Functions such as SUM() or
AVG() that expect a numeric
argument cast the argument to a number if necessary. For
SET values, the cast operation
causes the numeric value to be used.
Normally, you search for SET
values using the FIND_IN_SET()
function or the LIKE operator:
mysql>SELECT * FROMmysql>tbl_nameWHERE FIND_IN_SET('value',set_col)>0;SELECT * FROMtbl_nameWHEREset_colLIKE '%value%';
The first statement finds rows where
set_col contains the
value set member. The second is
similar, but not the same: It finds rows where
set_col contains
value anywhere, even as a substring
of another set member.
The following statements also are legal:
mysql>SELECT * FROMmysql>tbl_nameWHEREset_col& 1;SELECT * FROMtbl_nameWHEREset_col= 'val1,val2';
The first of these statements looks for values containing the
first set member. The second looks for an exact match. Be
careful with comparisons of the second type. Comparing set
values to
'
returns different results than comparing values to
val1,val2''.
You should specify the values in the same order in which they
are listed in the column definition.
val2,val1'
If you want to determine all possible values for a
SET column, use SHOW
COLUMNS FROM and parse the
tbl_name LIKE
set_colSET definition in the
Type column of the output.
The storage requirements for each data type supported by MySQL are listed here by category.
The maximum size of a row in a MyISAM table is
65,535 bytes. (However, each BLOB
or TEXT column contributes only 9
to 12 bytes toward this size.) This limitation may be shared by
other storage engines as well. See
Chapter 13, Storage Engines, for more information.
For tables using the NDBCLUSTER
storage engine, there is the factor of 4-byte
alignment to be taken into account when calculating
storage requirements. This means that all
NDB data storage is done in
multiples of 4 bytes. Thus, a column value that would take 15
bytes in a table using a storage engine other than
NDB requires 16 bytes in an
NDB table. This requirement applies
in addition to any other considerations that are discussed in
this section. For example, in
NDBCLUSTER tables, the
TINYINT,
SMALLINT,
MEDIUMINT, and
INTEGER
(INT) column types each require 4
bytes storage per record due to the alignment factor.
An exception to this rule is the
BIT type, which is
not 4-byte aligned. In MySQL Cluster
tables, a BIT(
column takes M)M bits of storage space.
However, if a table definition contains 1 or more
BIT columns (up to 32
BIT columns), then
NDBCLUSTER reserves 4 bytes (32
bits) per row for these. If a table definition contains more
than 32 BIT columns (up to 64
such columns), then NDBCLUSTER
reserves 8 bytes (that is, 64 bits) per row.
In addition, while a NULL itself does not
require any storage space,
NDBCLUSTER reserves 4 bytes per row
if the table definition contains any columns defined as
NULL, up to 32 NULL
columns. (If a MySQL Cluster table is defined with more than 32
NULL columns up to 64 NULL
columns, then 8 bytes per row is reserved.)
When calculating storage requirements for MySQL Cluster tables,
you must also remember that every table using the
NDBCLUSTER storage engine requires a
primary key; if no primary key is defined by the user, then a
“hidden” primary key will be created by
NDB. This hidden primary key consumes
31-35 bytes per table record.
You may find the ndb_size.pl utility to be
useful for estimating NDB storage
requirements. This Perl script connects to a current MySQL
(non-Cluster) database and creates a report on how much space that
database would require if it used the
NDBCLUSTER storage engine. See
Section 15.4.18, “ndb_size.pl — NDBCLUSTER Size Requirement Estimator”, for more
information.
| Data Type | Storage Required |
|---|---|
TINYINT | 1 byte |
SMALLINT | 2 bytes |
MEDIUMINT | 3 bytes |
INT,
INTEGER | 4 bytes |
BIGINT | 8 bytes |
FLOAT( | 4 bytes if 0 <= p <= 24, 8 bytes if 25
<= p <= 53 |
FLOAT | 4 bytes |
DOUBLE [PRECISION],
REAL | 8 bytes |
DECIMAL(,
NUMERIC( | Varies; see following discussion |
In MySQL versions up to and including 4.1,
DECIMAL columns are represented as
strings and their storage requirements are:
M+2 bytes, if
D > 0
bytes, if
M+1D = 0
D+2, if
M <
D
For details about internal representation of temporal values, see MySQL Internals: Important Algorithms and Structures.
In the following table, M represents
the declared column length in characters for nonbinary string
types and bytes for binary string types.
L represents the actual length in bytes
of a given string value.
| Data Type | Storage Required |
|---|---|
CHAR( | M × w bytes,
0 <= 255, where w is
the number of bytes required for the maximum-length
character in the character set |
BINARY( | M bytes, 0 <=
255 |
VARCHAR(,
VARBINARY( | L + 1 bytes, 0 <=
255 |
TINYBLOB,
TINYTEXT | L + 1 bytes, where
L <
28 |
BLOB, TEXT | L + 2 bytes, where
L <
216 |
MEDIUMBLOB,
MEDIUMTEXT | L + 3 bytes, where
L <
224 |
LONGBLOB,
LONGTEXT | L + 4 bytes, where
L <
232 |
ENUM(' | 1 or 2 bytes, depending on the number of enumeration values (65,535 values maximum) |
SET(' | 1, 2, 3, 4, or 8 bytes, depending on the number of set members (64 members maximum) |
Variable-length string types are stored using a length prefix plus
data. The length prefix requires from one to four bytes depending
on the data type, and the value of the prefix is
L (the byte length of the string). For
example, storage for a MEDIUMTEXT
value requires L bytes to store the
value plus three bytes to store the length of the value.
As of MySQL 4.1, to calculate the number of bytes used to store a
particular CHAR,
VARCHAR, or
TEXT column value, you must take
into account the character set used for that column and whether
the value contains multi-byte characters. In particular, when
using the utf8 Unicode character set, you must
keep in mind that not all characters use the same number of bytes
and can require up to three bytes per character. For a breakdown
of the storage used for different categories of
utf8 characters, see
Section 9.1.9, “Unicode Support”.
VARCHAR and the
BLOB and
TEXT types are variable-length
types. For each, the storage requirements depend on the actual
length of column values (represented by
L in the preceding table), rather than
on the type's maximum possible size. For example, a
VARCHAR(10) column can hold a string with a
maximum length of 10 characters. The actual storage required is
the length of the string (L), plus one
byte to record the length of the string. For the string
'abcd', L is 4 and
the storage requirement is five bytes.
The NDBCLUSTER engine supports only
fixed-width columns. This means that a
VARCHAR column from a table in a
MySQL Cluster will behave almost as if it were of type
CHAR (except that each record
still has one extra byte overhead). For example, in an
NDB table,
each record in a column declared as
VARCHAR(100) will take up 101 bytes for
storage, regardless of the length of the string actually stored
in any given record.
TEXT and
BLOB columns are implemented
differently in the NDBCLUSTER storage
engine, wherein each record in a
TEXT column is made up of two
separate parts. One of these is of fixed size (256 bytes), and is
actually stored in the original table. The other consists of any
data in excess of 256 bytes, which is stored in a hidden table.
The records in this second table are always 2,000 bytes long. This
means that the size of a TEXT
column is 256 if size <= 256 (where
size represents the size of the
record); otherwise, the size is 256 +
.
size + (2000 -
(size - 256) % 2000)
The size of an ENUM object is
determined by the number of different enumeration values. One byte
is used for enumerations with up to 255 possible values. Two bytes
are used for enumerations having between 256 and 65,535 possible
values. See Section 10.4.4, “The ENUM Type”.
The size of a SET object is
determined by the number of different set members. If the set size
is N, the object occupies
( bytes,
rounded up to 1, 2, 3, 4, or 8 bytes. A
N + 7)/8SET can have a maximum of 64
members. See Section 10.4.5, “The SET Type”.
For the most efficient use of storage, try to use the most precise
type in all cases. For example, if an integer column is used for
values in the range from 1 to
99999, MEDIUMINT UNSIGNED is
the best type. Of the types that represent all the required
values, it uses the least amount of storage.
For earlier MySQL versions, accurate representation of monetary
values was a common problem. In these MySQL versions, you should
also use the DECIMAL type. In this
case the value is stored as a string, so no loss of accuracy
should occur on storage. However, calculations on these
DECIMAL values are done using
double-precision operations. If accuracy is not too important or
if speed is important, the DOUBLE
type may also be good enough.
For high precision, you can always convert to a fixed-point type
stored in a BIGINT. This enables
you to do all calculations with 64-bit integers and then convert
results back to floating-point values only when necessary.
PROCEDURE ANALYSE can be used to obtain
suggestions for optimal column data types. For more information,
see Section 18.3.1, “PROCEDURE ANALYSE”.
To make it easier to use code written for SQL implementations from other vendors, MySQL maps data types as shown in the following table. These mappings make it easier to import table definitions from other database systems into MySQL.
| Other Vendor Type | MySQL Type |
|---|---|
BINARY( | CHAR( (before
MySQL 4.1.2) |
BOOL | TINYINT |
BOOLEAN | TINYINT |
CHARACTER VARYING( | VARCHAR( |
FIXED | DECIMAL (MySQL 4.1.0 on) |
FLOAT4 | FLOAT |
FLOAT8 | DOUBLE |
INT1 | TINYINT |
INT2 | SMALLINT |
INT3 | MEDIUMINT |
INT4 | INT |
INT8 | BIGINT |
LONG VARBINARY | MEDIUMBLOB |
LONG VARCHAR | MEDIUMTEXT |
LONG | MEDIUMTEXT (MySQL 4.1.0 on) |
MIDDLEINT | MEDIUMINT |
NUMERIC | DECIMAL |
VARBINARY( | VARCHAR( (before
MySQL 4.1.2) |
As of MySQL 4.1.2, BINARY and
VARBINARY are distinct data types
and are not converted to CHAR BINARY and
VARCHAR BINARY.
Data type mapping occurs at table creation time, after which the
original type specifications are discarded. If you create a table
with types used by other vendors and then issue a
DESCRIBE
statement, MySQL reports the table structure using the equivalent
MySQL types. For example:
tbl_name
mysql>CREATE TABLE t (a BOOL, b FLOAT8, c LONG VARCHAR, d NUMERIC);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>DESCRIBE t;+-------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +-------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | a | tinyint(1) | YES | | NULL | | | b | double | YES | | NULL | | | c | mediumtext | YES | | NULL | | | d | decimal(10,0) | YES | | NULL | | +-------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ 4 rows in set (0.01 sec)