Every “character” column (that is, a column of type CHAR
, VARCHAR
, a TEXT
type, or any synonym) has a column character set and a column collation. Column definition syntax for CREATE TABLE
and ALTER TABLE
has optional clauses for specifying the column character set and collation:
col_name
{CHAR | VARCHAR | TEXT} (col_length
) [CHARACTER SETcharset_name
] [COLLATEcollation_name
]
These clauses can also be used for ENUM
and SET
columns:
col_name
{ENUM | SET} (val_list
) [CHARACTER SETcharset_name
] [COLLATEcollation_name
]
Examples:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( col1 VARCHAR(5) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_german1_ci ); ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY col1 VARCHAR(5) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
MySQL chooses the column character set and collation in the following manner:
If both CHARACTER SET
and charset_name
COLLATE
are specified, character set collation_name
charset_name
and collation collation_name
are used.
CREATE TABLE t1 ( col1 CHAR(10) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci ) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_bin;
The character set and collation are specified for the column, so they are used. The column has character set utf8
and collation utf8_unicode_ci
.
If CHARACTER SET
is specified without charset_name
COLLATE
, character set charset_name
and its default collation are used.
CREATE TABLE t1 ( col1 CHAR(10) CHARACTER SET utf8 ) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_bin;
The character set is specified for the column, but the collation is not. The column has character set utf8
and the default collation for utf8
, which is utf8_general_ci
. To see the default collation for each character set, use the SHOW CHARACTER SET
statement or query the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
CHARACTER_SETS
table.
If COLLATE
is specified without collation_name
CHARACTER SET
, the character set associated with collation_name
and collation collation_name
are used.
CREATE TABLE t1 ( col1 CHAR(10) COLLATE utf8_polish_ci ) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_bin;
The collation is specified for the column, but the character set is not. The column has collation utf8_polish_ci
and the character set is the one associated with the collation, which is utf8
.
Otherwise (neither CHARACTER SET
nor COLLATE
is specified), the table character set and collation are used.
CREATE TABLE t1 ( col1 CHAR(10) ) CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_bin;
Neither the character set nor collation is specified for the column, so the table defaults are used. The column has character set latin1
and collation latin1_bin
.
The CHARACTER SET
and COLLATE
clauses are standard SQL.
If you use ALTER TABLE
to convert a column from one character set to another, MySQL attempts to map the data values, but if the character sets are incompatible, there may be data loss.