I have a large database which contains records that have <a>
tags in them and I would like to remove them. Of course there is the method where I create a PHP script that selects all, uses strip_tags
and updates the database, but this takes a long time. So how can I do this with a simple (or complicated) MySQL query?
9 Answers
MySQL >= 5.5 provides XML functions to solve your issue:
SELECT ExtractValue(field, '//text()') FROM table;
Reference: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/xml-functions.html
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2This is the best answer for less antiquated MySQL/MariaDB versions. I would like to note that mariadb supports this as well. mariadb.com/kb/en/library/extractvalue Aug 15, 2019 at 19:05
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Will not work on non-html text, unlike PHP's strip_tags. Also gives warnings for badly formated html.– LaloutreOct 22, 2019 at 3:19
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3
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2I'd love to use this, but it doesn't work for any text that contains HTML tags that don't terminate, like
<br>
or<img src="" alt="">
.– Ty.Jun 4, 2021 at 20:46
Here you go:
CREATE FUNCTION `strip_tags`($str text) RETURNS text
BEGIN
DECLARE $start, $end INT DEFAULT 1;
LOOP
SET $start = LOCATE("<", $str, $start);
IF (!$start) THEN RETURN $str; END IF;
SET $end = LOCATE(">", $str, $start);
IF (!$end) THEN SET $end = $start; END IF;
SET $str = INSERT($str, $start, $end - $start + 1, "");
END LOOP;
END;
I made sure it removes mismatched opening brackets because they're dangerous, though it ignores any unpaired closing brackets because they're harmless.
mysql> select strip_tags('<span>hel<b>lo <a href="world">wo<>rld</a> <<x>again<.');
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| strip_tags('<span>hel<b>lo <a href="world">wo<>rld</a> <<x>again<.') |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| hello world again. |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set
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didnt work for me; MySQL said: Documentation #1064 - You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '' at line 3– mahen3dNov 8, 2014 at 10:26
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6
delimiter // CREATE FUNCTION strip_tags($str text) RETURNS text BEGIN DECLARE $start, $end INT DEFAULT 1; LOOP SET $start = LOCATE("<", $str, $start); IF (!$start) THEN RETURN $str; END IF; SET $end = LOCATE(">", $str, $start); IF (!$end) THEN SET $end = $start; END IF; SET $str = INSERT($str, $start, $end - $start + 1, ""); END LOOP; END// delimiter ;
– nznJan 5, 2015 at 20:06 -
DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS strip_tags; DELIMITER | CREATE FUNCTION strip_tags($str text) RETURNS text BEGIN DECLARE $start, $end INT DEFAULT 1; LOOP SET $start = LOCATE("<", $str, $start); IF (!$start) THEN RETURN $str; END IF; SET $end = LOCATE(">", $str, $start); IF (!$end) THEN SET $end = $start; END IF; SET $str = INSERT($str, $start, $end - $start + 1, ""); END LOOP; END; | DELIMITER ; May 17, 2015 at 0:15
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even if I declare RETURNS text CHARSET utf8 the function returns question marks instead of accented characters, any clues please?– pticaJun 25, 2015 at 20:05
I don't believe there's any efficient way to do this in MySQL alone.
MySQL does have a REPLACE()
function, but it can only replace constant strings, not patterns. You could possibly write a MySQL stored function to search for and replace tags, but at that point you're probably better off writing a PHP script to do the job. It might not be quite as fast, but it will probably be faster to write.
I am passing this code on, seems very similar to the above. Worked for me, hope it helps.
BEGIN
DECLARE iStart, iEnd, iLength INT;
WHILE locate('<', Dirty) > 0 AND locate('>', Dirty, locate('<', Dirty)) > 0
DO
BEGIN
SET iStart = locate('<', Dirty), iEnd = locate('>', Dirty, locate('<', Dirty));
SET iLength = (iEnd - iStart) + 1;
IF iLength > 0 THEN
BEGIN
SET Dirty = insert(Dirty, iStart, iLength, '');
END;
END IF;
END;
END WHILE;
RETURN Dirty;
END
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3I did a small rough benchmark on 5000 (~20mb) various plain text / html samples (scraped job descriptions). Output of your example is exactly the same as of Boann's, however your code took ~32s to process and Boann's just 7s making Boann's solution 4.5x faster. I'm just putting this here for future reference if someone will face the same dilemma as I did. Thanks to both of you guys. May 27, 2015 at 12:04
Compatible with MySQL 8+ and MariaDB 10.0.5+
SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE(body, '<[^>]*>+', '') FROM app_cms_sections
I just extended the answer @boann to allow targetting of any specific tag so that we can replace out the tags one by one with each function call. You just need pass the tag parameter, e.g. 'a'
to replace out all opening/closing anchor tags. This answers the question asked by OP, unlike the accepted answer, which strips out ALL tags.
# MySQL function to programmatically replace out specified html tags from text/html fields
# run this to drop/update the stored function
DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS `strip_tags`;
DELIMITER |
# function to nuke all opening and closing tags of type specified in argument 2
CREATE FUNCTION `strip_tags`($str text, $tag text) RETURNS text
BEGIN
DECLARE $start, $end INT DEFAULT 1;
SET $str = COALESCE($str, '');
LOOP
SET $start = LOCATE(CONCAT('<', $tag), $str, $start);
IF (!$start) THEN RETURN $str; END IF;
SET $end = LOCATE('>', $str, $start);
IF (!$end) THEN SET $end = $start; END IF;
SET $str = INSERT($str, $start, $end - $start + 1, '');
SET $str = REPLACE($str, CONCAT('</', $tag, '>'), '');
END LOOP;
END;
| DELIMITER ;
# test select to nuke all opening <a> tags
SELECT
STRIP_TAGS(description, 'a') AS stripped
FROM
tmpcat;
# run update query to replace out all <a> tags
UPDATE tmpcat
SET
description = STRIP_TAGS(description, 'a');
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Error in query (1418): This function has none of DETERMINISTIC, NO SQL, or READS SQL DATA in its declaration and binary logging is enabled (you might want to use the less safe log_bin_trust_function_creators variable)– kklepperSep 26, 2021 at 21:13
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Sorry, my client had not enough privileges. Also see sitepoint.com/community/t/…– kklepperSep 26, 2021 at 21:26
Boann's works once I added SET $str = COALESCE($str, '');
.
from this post:
Also to note, you may want to put a SET $str = COALESCE($str, ''); just before the loop otherwise null values may cause a crash/never ending query. – Tom C Aug 17 at 9:51
I'm using the lib_mysqludf_preg library for this and a regex like this:
SELECT PREG_REPLACE('#<[^>]+>#',' ',cell) FROM table;
Also did it like this for rows which with encoded html entities:
SELECT PREG_REPLACE('#<.+?>#',' ',cell) FROM table;
There are probably cases where these might fail but I haven't encountered any and they're reasonably fast.
REPLACE()
works pretty well.
The subtle approach:
REPLACE(REPLACE(node.body,'<p>',''),'</p>','') as `post_content`
...and the not so subtle: (Converting strings into slugs)
LOWER(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE(TRIM(node.title), ':', ''), 'é', 'e'), ')', ''), '(', ''), ',', ''), '\\', ''), '\/', ''), '\"', ''), '?', ''), '\'', ''), '&', ''), '!', ''), '.', ''), '–', ''), ' ', '-'), '--', '-'), '--', '-'), '’', '')) as `post_name`