• sql查询特符号


    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  LIKE '_'

    出来两条记录: 一个_一个.

    ---------------------------------------------
    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  LIKE %'_'%

    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  LIKE '%_%'
    全部的结果都出来的

    -----------------------------------------------

    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  LIKE %'_'%

    这个是语法错误

    ---------------------------------------------------

    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  LIKE  '%\_%'
    出来两条结果,正常

    ===================

    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  =  '\_'

    SELECT * FROM `field_data_body` WHERE `body_value`  =  '_'
    等于号的时候是没有转义这样的说法的

    =========================

    For SQL Server, from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms179859.aspx :

    • % Any string of zero or more characters.

      WHERE title LIKE '%computer%' finds all book titles with the word 'computer' anywhere in the book title.

    • _ Any single character.

      WHERE au_fname LIKE '_ean' finds all four-letter first names that end with ean (Dean, Sean, and so on).

    • [ ] Any single character within the specified range ([a-f]) or set ([abcdef]).

      WHERE au_lname LIKE '[C-P]arsen' finds author last names ending with arsen and starting with any single character between C and P, for example Carsen, Larsen, Karsen, and so on. In range searches, the characters included in the range may vary depending on the sorting rules of the collation.

    • [^] Any single character not within the specified range ([^a-f]) or set ([^abcdef]).

      WHERE au_lname LIKE 'de[^l]%' all author last names starting with de and where the following letter is not l. 

    • =============================
    • Backslashes are difficult in mysql. I just ran a test directly from the mysql client, and found that to add the field, you do a single escape (two backslashes):

      INSERT INTO mytable (field1) VALUES ('ASDFA3\7\2011QWER');

      But with the LIKE command, escapes are needed to be represented literally, so you need to double-escape the statement (four backslashes):

      SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE field1 LIKE '%A3\\7\\2011%';

      Add to that the escapes necessary for you application layer, and it could get quite confusing. An alternative is to use a single character wildcard:

      SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE field1 LIKE '%A3_7_2011%';

      Another alternative is to use the 'NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES' mode:

      SET SESSION sql_mode='NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES';
      SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE field1 LIKE '%A372011%';

      EDIT (thanks, lucek):

      Or, to preserve the current sql_mode:

      SET @temp_sql_mode = @@SESSION.sql_mode;
      SET SESSION sql_mode = CONCAT_WS(',', @@SESSION.sql_mode, 'NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES');
      -- YOUR_SELECT_GOES_HERE;
      SET SESSION sql_mode = @temp_sql_mode;
    •  
  • 相关阅读:
    rowkey设计原则和方法
    ubuntu安装及使用
    sqoop数据迁移
    Hive 自定义UDF操作步骤
    hive之数据导入导出
    MySQL优化
    MongoDB、Redis、elasticSearch、hbase的对比
    数据库基本操作
    count(*) 和 count(1)和count(列名)区别
    BigDecimal的运算——加减乘除
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/qinqiu/p/7099545.html
Copyright © 2020-2023  润新知