Several SHOW statements provide
          additional character set information. These include
          SHOW CHARACTER SET,
          SHOW COLLATION,
          SHOW CREATE DATABASE,
          SHOW CREATE TABLE and
          SHOW COLUMNS. These statements
          are described here briefly. For more information, see
          Section 12.4.5, “SHOW Syntax”.
        
          INFORMATION_SCHEMA has several tables that
          contain information similar to that displayed by the
          SHOW statements. For example,
          the CHARACTER_SETS and
          COLLATIONS tables contain the
          information displayed by SHOW CHARACTER
          SET and SHOW
          COLLATION. See Chapter 20, INFORMATION_SCHEMA Tables.
        
          The SHOW CHARACTER SET command
          shows all available character sets. It takes an optional
          LIKE clause that indicates which
          character set names to match. For example:
        
mysql> SHOW CHARACTER SET LIKE 'latin%';
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
| Charset | Description                 | Default collation | Maxlen |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
| latin1  | cp1252 West European        | latin1_swedish_ci |      1 |
| latin2  | ISO 8859-2 Central European | latin2_general_ci |      1 |
| latin5  | ISO 8859-9 Turkish          | latin5_turkish_ci |      1 |
| latin7  | ISO 8859-13 Baltic          | latin7_general_ci |      1 |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
          The output from SHOW COLLATION
          includes all available character sets. It takes an optional
          LIKE clause that indicates which
          collation names to match. For example:
        
mysql> SHOW COLLATION LIKE 'latin1%';
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| Collation         | Charset | Id | Default | Compiled | Sortlen |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| latin1_german1_ci | latin1  |  5 |         |          |       0 |
| latin1_swedish_ci | latin1  |  8 | Yes     | Yes      |       0 |
| latin1_danish_ci  | latin1  | 15 |         |          |       0 |
| latin1_german2_ci | latin1  | 31 |         | Yes      |       2 |
| latin1_bin        | latin1  | 47 |         | Yes      |       0 |
| latin1_general_ci | latin1  | 48 |         |          |       0 |
| latin1_general_cs | latin1  | 49 |         |          |       0 |
| latin1_spanish_ci | latin1  | 94 |         |          |       0 |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
          SHOW CREATE DATABASE displays
          the CREATE DATABASE statement
          that creates a given database:
        
mysql> SHOW CREATE DATABASE test;
+----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
| Database | Create Database                                                 |
+----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
| test     | CREATE DATABASE `test` /*!40100 DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 */ |
+----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
          If no COLLATE clause is shown, the default
          collation for the character set applies.
        
          SHOW CREATE TABLE is similar,
          but displays the CREATE TABLE
          statement to create a given table. The column definitions
          indicate any character set specifications, and the table
          options include character set information.
        
          The SHOW COLUMNS statement
          displays the collations of a table's columns when invoked as
          SHOW FULL
          COLUMNS. Columns with
          CHAR,
          VARCHAR, or
          TEXT data types have
          collations. Numeric and other noncharacter types have no
          collation (indicated by NULL as the
          Collation value). For example:
        
mysql> SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM person\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
     Field: id
      Type: smallint(5) unsigned
 Collation: NULL
      Null: NO
       Key: PRI
   Default: NULL
     Extra: auto_increment
Privileges: select,insert,update,references
   Comment:
*************************** 2. row ***************************
     Field: name
      Type: char(60)
 Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
      Null: NO
       Key:
   Default:
     Extra:
Privileges: select,insert,update,references
   Comment:
The character set is not part of the display but is implied by the collation name.


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