MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
Western European character sets cover most West European languages, such as French, Spanish, Catalan, Basque, Portuguese, Italian, Albanian, Dutch, German, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Faroese, Icelandic, Irish, Scottish, and English.
ascii
(US ASCII) collations:
ascii_bin
ascii_general_ci
(default)
cp850
(DOS West European) collations:
cp850_bin
cp850_general_ci
(default)
dec8
(DEC Western European) collations:
dec8_bin
dec8_swedish_ci
(default)
The dec
character set is deprecated;
expect support for it to be removed in a subsequent MySQL
release.
hp8
(HP Western European) collations:
hp8_bin
hp8_english_ci
(default)
The hp8
character set is deprecated;
expect support for it to be removed in a subsequent MySQL
release.
latin1
(cp1252 West European) collations:
latin1_bin
latin1_danish_ci
latin1_general_ci
latin1_general_cs
latin1_german1_ci
latin1_german2_ci
latin1_spanish_ci
latin1_swedish_ci
(default)
MySQL's latin1
is the same as the Windows
cp1252
character set. This means it is
the same as the official ISO 8859-1
or
IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority)
latin1
, except that IANA
latin1
treats the code points between
0x80
and 0x9f
as
“undefined,” whereas cp1252
,
and therefore MySQL's latin1
, assign
characters for those positions. For example,
0x80
is the Euro sign. For the
“undefined” entries in
cp1252
, MySQL translates
0x81
to Unicode
0x0081
, 0x8d
to
0x008d
, 0x8f
to
0x008f
, 0x90
to
0x0090
, and 0x9d
to
0x009d
.
The latin1_swedish_ci
collation is the
default that probably is used by the majority of MySQL
customers. Although it is frequently said that it is based
on the Swedish/Finnish collation rules, there are Swedes and
Finns who disagree with this statement.
The latin1_german1_ci
and
latin1_german2_ci
collations are based on
the DIN-1 and DIN-2 standards, where DIN stands for
Deutsches Institut für
Normung (the German equivalent of ANSI).
DIN-1 is called the “dictionary collation” and
DIN-2 is called the “phone book collation.” For
an example of the effect this has in comparisons or when
doing searches, see
Section 12.8.6, “Examples of the Effect of Collation”.
latin1_german1_ci
(dictionary) rules:
Ä = A Ö = O Ü = U ß = s
latin1_german2_ci
(phone-book) rules:
Ä = AE Ö = OE Ü = UE ß = ss
In the latin1_spanish_ci
collation,
ñ
(n-tilde) is a separate letter between
n
and o
.
macroman
(Mac West European) collations:
macroman_bin
macroman_general_ci
(default)
macroroman
is deprecated; expect support
for it to be removed in a subsequent MySQL release.
swe7
(7bit Swedish) collations:
swe7_bin
swe7_swedish_ci
(default)