A summary of the string data types follows. For additional information about properties of the string types, see Section 10.4, “String Types”. Storage requirements are given in 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 12.1.10.1, “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:
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.
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
);
The ASCII attribute is shorthand for
CHARACTER SET latin1.
The UNICODE attribute is shorthand
for CHARACTER SET ucs2.
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,
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.
[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. If M is omitted, the
length is 1.
Trailing spaces are removed when
CHAR values are retrieved.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, 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. However, this
conversion causes the column to become a variable-length
column, and also affects trailing-space removal.
In MySQL 5.0.3 and later, a
CHAR length greater than 255
is illegal and fails with an error:
mysql> CREATE TABLE c1 (col1 INT, col2 CHAR(500));
ERROR 1074 (42000): Column length too big for column 'col' (max = 255);
use BLOB or TEXT instead
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”.
The CHAR BYTE data type is an
alias for the BINARY data
type. This is a compatibility feature.
MySQL allows 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. In MySQL
5.0, the range of M
is 0 to 255 before MySQL 5.0.3, and 0 to 65,535 in MySQL
5.0.3 and later. The effective maximum length of a
VARCHAR in MySQL 5.0.3 and
later is subject to the maximum row size (65,535 bytes,
which is shared among all columns) and the character set
used. For example, utf8 characters can
require up to three bytes per character, so a
VARCHAR column that uses the
utf8 character set can be declared to be
a maximum of 21,844 characters.
MySQL stores VARCHAR values
as a one-byte or two-byte length prefix plus data. The
length prefix indicates the number of bytes in the value. A
VARCHAR column uses one
length byte if values require no more than 255 bytes, two
length bytes if values may require more than 255 bytes.
Before 5.0.3, trailing spaces were removed when
VARCHAR values were stored,
which differs from the standard SQL specification.
Prior to MySQL 5.0.3, 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. 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”.
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.
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.
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.
An optional length M can be given
for this type. If this is done, 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.
An optional length M can be given
for this type. If this is done, 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. 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. The effective maximum length of
LONGTEXT
columns also 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.

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