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I am setting up a very small mySQL database that stores, first name, last name, email and phone number and am struggling to find the 'perfect' datatype for each field. I know there is no such thing as a perfect answer, but there must be some sort of common convention for commonly used fields such as these. For instance, I have determined that an unformatted US phone number is too big to be stored as an unsigned int, it must be at least a bigint.

Because I am sure other people would probably find this useful, I dont want to restrict my question to just the fields I mentioned above.

What datatypes are appropriate for common database fields? Fields like phone number, email and address?

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Someone's going to post a much better answer than this, but just wanted to make the point that personally I would never store a phone number in any kind of integer field, mainly because:

  1. You don't need to do any kind of arithmetic with it, and
  2. Sooner or later someone's going to try to put brackets around their area code.

In general though, I seem to almost exclusively use:

  • INT(11) for anything that is either an ID or references another ID
  • DATETIME for time stamps
  • VARCHAR(255) for anything guaranteed to be under 255 characters (page titles, names, etc)
  • TEXT for pretty much everything else.

Of course there are exceptions, but I find that covers most eventualities.

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Also, integers only support up to value of 2 billion. That's 2,000,000,000. Which really isn't enough space when you want to store international phone numbers, complete with country code. I don't even see how you could find enough space to store a number like 655-405-4055 (6,554,054,055) – Kibbee Dec 10 '08 at 1:05
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Plus it's just wrong. Someone much wiser than me told me when I was starting out that (with databasing) just because something looks like a number doesn't mean it is or should be treated as such... – da5id Dec 10 '08 at 1:07
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In my experience, first name/last name fields should be at least 48 characters -- there are names from some countries such as Malaysia or India that are very long in their full form.

Phone numbers and postcodes you should always treat as text, not numbers. The normal reason given is that there are postcodes that begin with 0, and in some countries, phone numbers can also begin with 0. But the real reason is that they aren't numbers -- they're identifiers that happen to be made up of numerical digits (and that's ignoring countries like Canada that have letters in their postcodes). So store them in a text field.

In MySQL you can use VARCHAR fields for this type of information. Whilst it sounds lazy, it means you don't have to be too concerned about the right minimum size.

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Since you're going to be dealing with data of a variable length (names, email addresses), then you'd be wanting to use VARCHAR. The amount of space taken up by a VARCHAR field is [field length] + 1 bytes, up to max length 255, so I wouldn't worry too much about trying to find a perfect size. Take a look at what you'd imagine might be the longest length might be, then double it and set that as your VARCHAR limit. That said...:

I generally set email fields to be VARCHAR(100) - i haven't come up with a problem from that yet. Names I set to VARCHAR(50).

As the others have said, phone numbers and zip/postal codes are not actually numeric values, they're strings containing the digits 0-9 (and sometimes more!), and therefore you should treat them as a string. VARCHAR(20) should be well sufficient.

Note that if you were to store phone numbers as integers, many systems will assume that a number starting with 0 is an octal (base 8) number! Therefore, the perfectly valid phone number "0731602412" would get put into your database as the decimal number "124192010"!!

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