106

I was designing a database for a site where I need to use a boolean datetype to store only 2 states, true or false. I am using MySQL.

While designing the database using phpMyAdmin, I found that I have both the BOOLEAN datatype and the TINYINT datatype. I went through different articles, some said TINYINT is the same as BOOLEAN, no difference. Some say BOOLEAN is converted into TINYINT in MySQL.

MY question is, if they both are same why do there exist two? There should be only one of them.

Here is the reference to the article(s) I read:

0

5 Answers 5

148

MySQL does not have internal boolean data type. It uses the smallest integer data type - TINYINT.

The BOOLEAN and BOOL are equivalents of TINYINT(1), because they are synonyms.

Try to create this table -

CREATE TABLE table1 (
  column1 BOOLEAN DEFAULT NULL
);

Then run SHOW CREATE TABLE, you will get this output -

CREATE TABLE `table1` (
  `column1` tinyint(1) DEFAULT NULL
)
7
  • 1
    But your answer is correct in all other aspects. What seems to be confusing the OP is the existence of synonyms. Jun 23, 2012 at 8:17
  • 2
    It seems that it is done for backward compatibility. The BOOLEAN data type was before the MySQL 5 and the was not optimized BIT type, it was also TINYINT. From the documentation - New Features Planned for 5.1: Optimize the BIT type to take one bit. (BIT now takes one byte; it is treated as a synonym for TINYINT.).
    – Devart
    Jun 23, 2012 at 8:24
  • 6
    Yes, you can know have BIT(1) or BIT(17) or even BIT(64) Jun 23, 2012 at 8:25
  • 3
    @Devart -- Where your answer has the most votes and appears first (in my list anyway) and some time has past, is there any chance you would be willing add to your answer to include some discussion of the BIT type on MySQL 5.1 and later?
    – Jonathan
    Dec 11, 2016 at 9:34
  • 3
    @Jonathan Perhaps mentioning it is valuable, however BIT(1) doesn't actually use any less space than TINYINT(1) and does not display as most people would expect when using the standard mysql console. Because of that downside, and no storage benefit, just using TINYINT(1) or BOOLEAN seems to be the most common in my experience. Apr 29, 2017 at 21:57
34

Just a note for php developers (I lack the necessary stackoverflow points to post this as a comment) ... the automagic (and silent) conversion to TINYINT means that php retrieves a value from a "BOOLEAN" column as a "0" or "1", not the expected (by me) true/false.

A developer who is looking at the SQL used to create a table and sees something like: "some_boolean BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT FALSE," might reasonably expect to see true/false results when a row containing that column is retrieved. Instead (at least in my version of PHP), the result will be "0" or "1" (yes, a string "0" or string "1", not an int 0/1, thank you php).

It's a nit, but enough to cause unit tests to fail.

1
  • 5
    As an additional note, PHP's mysql drivers pull in all integer types as strings.
    – kojow7
    Jul 12, 2017 at 3:59
24

The Newest MySQL Versions have the new BIT data type in which you can specify the number of bits in the field, for example BIT(1) to use as Boolean type, because it can be only 0 or 1.

7

As of MySql 5.1 version reference

BIT(M) =  approximately (M+7)/8 bytes, 
BIT(1) =  (1+7)/8 = 1 bytes (8 bits)

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

TINYINT(1) take 8 bits.

https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/storage-requirements.html#data-types-storage-reqs-numeric

1
  • 1
    Your reference says the storage required is actually "approximately (M+7)/8 bytes". i.e., it rounds up to the next full byte. Thus it does not take 1 bit.
    – mpen
    May 15, 2017 at 23:42
6

The numeric type overview for MySQL states: BOOL, BOOLEAN: These types are synonyms for TINYINT(1). A value of zero is considered false. Nonzero values are considered true.

See here: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/numeric-type-overview.html

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.