MySQL 5.7 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6
Cast functions and operators enable conversion of values from one data type to another.
BINARY
expr
The BINARY operator converts
the expression to a binary string (a string that has the
binary character set and
binary collation). A common use for
BINARY is to force a character
string comparison to be done byte by byte using numeric byte
values rather than character by character. The
BINARY operator also causes
trailing spaces in comparisons to be significant. For
information about the differences between the
binary collation of the
binary character set and the
_bin collations of nonbinary character
sets, see Section 10.8.5, “The binary Collation Compared to _bin Collations”.
mysql>SELECT 'a' = 'A';-> 1 mysql>SELECT BINARY 'a' = 'A';-> 0 mysql>SELECT 'a' = 'a ';-> 1 mysql>SELECT BINARY 'a' = 'a ';-> 0
In a comparison, BINARY affects
the entire operation; it can be given before either operand
with the same result.
To convert a string expression to a binary string, these constructs are equivalent:
CONVERT(exprUSING BINARY) CAST(exprAS BINARY) BINARYexpr
If a value is a string literal, it can be designated as a
binary string without converting it by using the
_binary character set introducer:
mysql>SELECT 'a' = 'A';-> 1 mysql>SELECT _binary 'a' = 'A';-> 0
For information about introducers, see Section 10.3.8, “Character Set Introducers”.
The BINARY operator in
expressions differs in effect from the
BINARY attribute in character column
definitions. For a character column defined with the
BINARY attribute, MySQL assigns the table
default character set and the binary
(_bin) collation of that character set.
Every nonbinary character set has a _bin
collation. For example, if the table default character set
is utf8, these two column definitions are
equivalent:
CHAR(10) BINARY CHAR(10) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin
The use of CHARACTER SET binary in the
definition of a CHAR,
VARCHAR, or
TEXT column causes the column
to be treated as the corresponding binary string data type.
For example, the following pairs of definitions are
equivalent:
CHAR(10) CHARACTER SET binary BINARY(10) VARCHAR(10) CHARACTER SET binary VARBINARY(10) TEXT CHARACTER SET binary BLOB
If BINARY is invoked from
within the mysql client, binary strings
display using hexadecimal notation, depending on the value
of the --binary-as-hex. For
more information about that option, see
Section 4.5.1, “mysql — The MySQL Command-Line Client”.
CAST( takes an
expression of any type and produces a result value of the
specified type. This operation may also be expressed as
expr AS
typeCONVERT(, which is
equivalent.
expr,
type)
These type values are permitted:
BINARY[(
N)]
Produces a string with the
VARBINARY data type,
except that when the expression
expr is empty (zero length),
the result type is BINARY(0). If the
optional length N is given,
BINARY(
causes the cast to use no more than
N)N bytes of the argument.
Values shorter than N bytes
are padded with 0x00 bytes to a
length of N. If the optional
length N is not given, MySQL
calculates the maximum length from the expression. If
the supplied or calculated length is greater than an
internal threshold, the result type is
BLOB. If the length is still too
long, the result type is LONGBLOB.
For a description of how casting to
BINARY affects comparisons, see
Section 11.3.3, “The BINARY and VARBINARY Types”.
CHAR[(
N)]
[charset_info]
Produces a string with the
VARCHAR data type, unless
the expression expr is empty
(zero length), in which case the result type is
CHAR(0). If the optional length
N is given,
CHAR(
causes the cast to use no more than
N)N characters of the argument.
No padding occurs for values shorter than
N characters. If the optional
length N is not given, MySQL
calculates the maximum length from the expression. If
the supplied or calculated length is greater than an
internal threshold, the result type is
TEXT. If the length is still too
long, the result type is LONGTEXT.
With no charset_info clause,
CHAR produces a string with the
default character set. To specify the character set
explicitly, these
charset_info values are
permitted:
CHARACTER SET
:
Produces a string with the given character set.
charset_name
ASCII: Shorthand for
CHARACTER SET latin1.
UNICODE: Shorthand for
CHARACTER SET ucs2.
In all cases, the string has the character set default collation.
DATE
Produces a DATE value.
DATETIME[(
M)]
Produces a DATETIME
value. If the optional M
value is given, it specifies the fractional seconds
precision.
DECIMAL[(
M[,D])]
Produces a DECIMAL value.
If the optional M and
D values are given, they
specify the maximum number of digits (the precision) and
the number of digits following the decimal point (the
scale). If D is omitted, 0 is
assumed. If M is omitted, 10
is assumed.
JSON
Produces a JSON value.
For details on the rules for conversion of values
between JSON and other
types, see Comparison and Ordering of JSON Values.
NCHAR[(
N)]
Like CHAR, but produces a string with
the national character set. See
Section 10.3.7, “The National Character Set”.
Unlike CHAR, NCHAR
does not permit trailing character set information to be
specified.
SIGNED [INTEGER]
Produces a signed BIGINT
value.
TIME[(
M)]
Produces a TIME value. If
the optional M value is
given, it specifies the fractional seconds precision.
UNSIGNED [INTEGER]
Produces an unsigned
BIGINT value.
CONVERT(
expr
USING transcoding_name)
CONVERT(
is standard SQL syntax. The non-expr
USING transcoding_name)USING
form of CONVERT() is ODBC
syntax.
CONVERT(
converts data between different character sets. In MySQL,
transcoding names are the same as the corresponding
character set names. For example, this statement converts
the string expr
USING transcoding_name)'abc' in the default character
set to the corresponding string in the
utf8 character set:
SELECT CONVERT('abc' USING utf8);
CONVERT( syntax (without
expr,
type)USING) takes an expression and a
type value specifying a result
type, and produces a result value of the specified type.
This operation may also be expressed as
CAST(, which is
equivalent. For more information, see the description of
expr AS
type)CAST().
CONVERT() with a
USING clause converts data between character
sets:
CONVERT(exprUSINGtranscoding_name)
In MySQL, transcoding names are the same as the corresponding character set names.
Examples:
SELECT CONVERT('test' USING utf8);
SELECT CONVERT(_latin1'Müller' USING utf8);
INSERT INTO utf8_table (utf8_column)
SELECT CONVERT(latin1_column USING utf8) FROM latin1_table;
To convert strings between character sets, you can also use
CONVERT( syntax (without
expr,
type)USING), or
CAST(, which is equivalent:
expr AS
type)
CONVERT(string, CHAR[(N)] CHARACTER SETcharset_name) CAST(stringAS CHAR[(N)] CHARACTER SETcharset_name)
Examples:
SELECT CONVERT('test', CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8);
SELECT CAST('test' AS CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8);
If you specify CHARACTER SET
as just shown,
the character set and collation of the result are
charset_namecharset_name and the default
collation of charset_name. If you
omit CHARACTER SET
, the character
set and collation of the result are defined by the
charset_namecharacter_set_connection and
collation_connection system
variables that determine the default connection character set
and collation (see Section 10.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”).
A COLLATE clause is not permitted within a
CONVERT() or
CAST() call, but you can apply it
to the function result. For example, these are legal:
SELECT CONVERT('test' USING utf8) COLLATE utf8_bin;
SELECT CONVERT('test', CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8) COLLATE utf8_bin;
SELECT CAST('test' AS CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8) COLLATE utf8_bin;
But these are illegal:
SELECT CONVERT('test' USING utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
SELECT CONVERT('test', CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
SELECT CAST('test' AS CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
For string literals, another way to specify the character set is
to use a character set introducer. _latin1
and _latin2 in the preceding example are
instances of introducers. Unlike conversion functions such as
CAST(), or
CONVERT(), which convert a string
from one character set to another, an introducer designates a
string literal as having a particular character set, with no
conversion involved. For more information, see
Section 10.3.8, “Character Set Introducers”.
Normally, you cannot compare a
BLOB value or other binary string
in case-insensitive fashion because binary strings use the
binary character set, which has no collation
with the concept of lettercase. To perform a case-insensitive
comparison, first use the
CONVERT() or
CAST() function to convert the
value to a nonbinary string. Comparisons of the resulting string
use its collation. For example, if the conversion result
collation is not case-sensitive, a
LIKE operation is not
case-sensitive. That is true for the following operation because
the default latin1 collation
(latin1_swedish_ci) is not case-sensitive:
SELECT 'A' LIKE CONVERT(blob_colUSING latin1) FROMtbl_name;
To specify a particular collation for the converted string, use
a COLLATE clause following the
CONVERT() call:
SELECT 'A' LIKE CONVERT(blob_colUSING latin1) COLLATE latin1_german1_ci FROMtbl_name;
To use a different character set, substitute its name for
latin1 in the preceding statements (and
similarly to use a different collation).
CONVERT() and
CAST() can be used more generally
for comparing strings represented in different character sets.
For example, a comparison of these strings results in an error
because they have different character sets:
mysql>SET @s1 = _latin1 'abc', @s2 = _latin2 'abc';mysql>SELECT @s1 = @s2;ERROR 1267 (HY000): Illegal mix of collations (latin1_swedish_ci,IMPLICIT) and (latin2_general_ci,IMPLICIT) for operation '='
Converting one of the strings to a character set compatible with the other enables the comparison to occur without error:
mysql> SELECT @s1 = CONVERT(@s2 USING latin1);
+---------------------------------+
| @s1 = CONVERT(@s2 USING latin1) |
+---------------------------------+
| 1 |
+---------------------------------+
Character set conversion is also useful preceding lettercase
conversion of binary strings.
LOWER() and
UPPER() are ineffective when
applied directly to binary strings because the concept of
lettercase does not apply. To perform lettercase conversion of a
binary string, first convert it to a nonbinary string using a
character set appropriate for the data stored in the string:
mysql>SET @str = BINARY 'New York';mysql>SELECT LOWER(@str), LOWER(CONVERT(@str USING latin1));+-------------+-----------------------------------+ | LOWER(@str) | LOWER(CONVERT(@str USING latin1)) | +-------------+-----------------------------------+ | New York | new york | +-------------+-----------------------------------+
Be aware that if you apply BINARY,
CAST(), or
CONVERT() to an indexed column,
MySQL may not be able to use the index efficiently.
The cast functions are useful for creating a column with a
specific type in a
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT statement:
mysql>CREATE TABLE new_table SELECT CAST('2000-01-01' AS DATE) AS c1;mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE new_table\G*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: new_table Create Table: CREATE TABLE `new_table` ( `c1` date DEFAULT NULL ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
The cast functions are useful for sorting
ENUM columns in lexical order.
Normally, sorting of ENUM columns
occurs using the internal numeric values. Casting the values to
CHAR results in a lexical sort:
SELECTenum_colFROMtbl_nameORDER BY CAST(enum_colAS CHAR);
CAST() also changes the result if
you use it as part of a more complex expression such as
CONCAT('Date: ',CAST(NOW() AS
DATE)).
For temporal values, there is little need to use
CAST() to extract data in
different formats. Instead, use a function such as
EXTRACT(),
DATE_FORMAT(), or
TIME_FORMAT(). See
Section 12.7, “Date and Time Functions”.
To cast a string to a number, it normally suffices to use the string value in numeric context:
mysql> SELECT 1+'1';
-> 2
That is also true for hexadecimal and bit literals, which are binary strings by default:
mysql>SELECT X'41', X'41'+0;-> 'A', 65 mysql>SELECT b'1100001', b'1100001'+0;-> 'a', 97
A string used in an arithmetic operation is converted to a floating-point number during expression evaluation.
A number used in string context is converted to a string:
mysql> SELECT CONCAT('hello you ',2);
-> 'hello you 2'
For information about implicit conversion of numbers to strings, see Section 12.3, “Type Conversion in Expression Evaluation”.
MySQL supports arithmetic with both signed and unsigned 64-bit
values. For numeric operators (such as
+ or
-) where one of
the operands is an unsigned integer, the result is unsigned by
default (see Section 12.6.1, “Arithmetic Operators”). To
override this, use the SIGNED or
UNSIGNED cast operator to cast a value to a
signed or unsigned 64-bit integer, respectively.
mysql>SELECT 1 - 2;-> -1 mysql>SELECT CAST(1 - 2 AS UNSIGNED);-> 18446744073709551615 mysql>SELECT CAST(CAST(1 - 2 AS UNSIGNED) AS SIGNED);-> -1
If either operand is a floating-point value, the result is a
floating-point value and is not affected by the preceding rule.
(In this context, DECIMAL column
values are regarded as floating-point values.)
mysql> SELECT CAST(1 AS UNSIGNED) - 2.0;
-> -1.0
The SQL mode affects the result of conversion operations (see Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”). Examples:
For conversion of a “zero” date string to a
date, CONVERT() and
CAST() return
NULL and produce a warning when the
NO_ZERO_DATE SQL mode is
enabled.
For integer subtraction, if the
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION
SQL mode is enabled, the subtraction result is signed even
if any operand is unsigned.