Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
M
MariaDB
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
CI / CD
CI / CD
Pipelines
Jobs
Schedules
Analytics
Analytics
CI / CD
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Jobs
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
nexedi
MariaDB
Commits
6665beed
Commit
6665beed
authored
Jun 13, 2002
by
arjen@fred.bitbike.com
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
Style cleanups.
parent
409fba38
Changes
1
Show whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
with
27 additions
and
27 deletions
+27
-27
Docs/manual.texi
Docs/manual.texi
+27
-27
No files found.
Docs/manual.texi
View file @
6665beed
...
...
@@ -2655,10 +2655,10 @@ directory.
This has a few implications:
@cindex database names, case
sensitivity
@cindex table names, case
sensitivity
@cindex case
sensitivity, of database names
@cindex case
sensitivity, of table names
@cindex database names, case
-
sensitivity
@cindex table names, case
-
sensitivity
@cindex case
-
sensitivity, of database names
@cindex case
-
sensitivity, of table names
@itemize @minus
...
...
@@ -8203,7 +8203,7 @@ you need to rebuild them with @code{ALTER TABLE table_name TYPE=MyISAM},
@strong{even} if they are of @code{MyISAM} type.
@item
@code{LOCATE()} and @code{INSTR()} are case-sensitive if one of the
arguments is a binary string. Otherwise they are case
insensitive.
arguments is a binary string. Otherwise they are case
-
insensitive.
@item
@code{STRCMP()} now uses the current character set when doing comparisons,
which means that the default comparison behavior now is case-insensitive.
...
...
@@ -15345,7 +15345,7 @@ table entry with @code{Host}, @code{User}, and @code{Db} fields of
tables contain scope fields indicating tables or table/column combinations
to which each entry applies.
@cindex case
sensitivity, in access checking
@cindex case
-
sensitivity, in access checking
For access-checking purposes, comparisons of @code{Host} values are
case-insensitive. @code{User}, @code{Password}, @code{Db}, and
@code{Table_name} values are case-sensitive.
...
...
@@ -27979,7 +27979,7 @@ may find it useful to refer to the various indexes.
@menu
* Literals:: Literals: How to Write Strings and Numbers
* Legal names:: Database, Table, Index, Column, and Alias Names
* Name case sensitivity:: Case
Sensitivity in Names
* Name case sensitivity:: Case
-
Sensitivity in Names
* Variables:: User Variables
* Comments:: Comment Syntax
* Reserved words:: Is MySQL Picky About Reserved Words?
...
...
@@ -28347,14 +28347,14 @@ programs prefix table names with a @samp{.} character.
@cindex names, case-sensitivity
@cindex case-sensitivity, in names
@cindex database names, case
sensitivity
@cindex table names, case
sensitivity
@cindex column names, case
sensitivity
@cindex alias names, case
sensitivity
@cindex database names, case
-
sensitivity
@cindex table names, case
-
sensitivity
@cindex column names, case
-
sensitivity
@cindex alias names, case
-
sensitivity
In MySQL, databases and tables correspond to directories and files
within those directories. Consequently, the case
sensitivity of the
underlying operating system determines the case
sensitivity of database and
within those directories. Consequently, the case
-
sensitivity of the
underlying operating system determines the case
-
sensitivity of database and
table names. This means database and table names are case-insensitive in
Windows, and case-sensitive in most varieties of Unix (Mac OS X being an
exception).
...
...
@@ -31036,7 +31036,7 @@ mysql> SELECT LOCATE('xbar', 'foobar');
@end example
This function is multi-byte safe. In MySQL 3.23 this function is case
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
sensitive if either argument is
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
-
sensitive if either argument is
a binary string.
@findex LOCATE()
...
...
@@ -31051,7 +31051,7 @@ mysql> SELECT LOCATE('bar', 'foobarbar',5);
@end example
This function is multi-byte safe. In MySQL 3.23 this function is case
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
sensitive if either argument is
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
-
sensitive if either argument is
a binary string.
@findex INSTR()
...
...
@@ -31068,7 +31068,7 @@ mysql> SELECT INSTR('xbar', 'foobar');
@end example
This function is multi-byte safe. In MySQL 3.23 this function is case
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
sensitive if either argument is
sensitive, while in 4.0 it's only case
-
sensitive if either argument is
a binary string.
@findex LPAD()
...
...
@@ -31425,7 +31425,7 @@ a binary string. This only affects comparisons.
@menu
* String comparison functions:: String Comparison Functions
* Case Sensitivity Operators:: Case
Sensitivity
* Case Sensitivity Operators:: Case
-
Sensitivity
@end menu
@node String comparison functions, Case Sensitivity Operators, String functions, String functions
...
...
@@ -31434,8 +31434,8 @@ a binary string. This only affects comparisons.
@findex string comparison functions
@findex functions, string comparison
@cindex case
sensitivity, in string comparisons
@cindex string comparisons, case
sensitivity
@cindex case
-
sensitivity, in string comparisons
@cindex string comparisons, case
-
sensitivity
Normally, if any expression in a string comparison is case-sensitive, the
comparison is performed in case-sensitive fashion.
...
...
@@ -31591,7 +31591,7 @@ positive floating-point number. Zero relevance means no similarity.
@end table
@node Case Sensitivity Operators, , String comparison functions, String functions
@subsubsection Case
Sensitivity
@subsubsection Case
-
Sensitivity
@findex casts
...
...
@@ -47530,7 +47530,7 @@ the server runs, for example, in @code{safe_mysqld} or @code{mysql.server}.
@menu
* Case sensitivity:: Case
Sensitivity in Searches
* Case sensitivity:: Case
-
Sensitivity in Searches
* Using DATE:: Problems Using @code{DATE} Columns
* Problems with NULL:: Problems with @code{NULL} Values
* Problems with alias:: Problems with @code{alias}
...
...
@@ -47540,9 +47540,9 @@ the server runs, for example, in @code{safe_mysqld} or @code{mysql.server}.
@end menu
@node Case sensitivity, Using DATE, Query Issues, Query Issues
@appendixsubsec Case
Sensitivity in Searches
@appendixsubsec Case
-
Sensitivity in Searches
@cindex case
sensitivity, in searches
@cindex case
-
sensitivity, in searches
@cindex searching, and case-sensitivity
@cindex Chinese
@cindex Big5 Chinese character encoding
...
...
@@ -50007,7 +50007,7 @@ Fixed the @code{FLOAT(X+1,X)} is not converted to @code{FLOAT(X+2,X)}.
(This also affected @code{DECIMAL}, @code{DOUBLE} and @code{REAL} types)
@item
Fixed the result from @code{IF()} is case in-sensitive if the 2 and
third arguments are case
sensitive.
third arguments are case
-
sensitive.
@item
Fixed core dump problem on OSF in @code{gethostbyname_r}.
@item
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment