I have a MySQL table with many numeric columns (some INT, some FLOAT). I would like to query it with the MySQL command-line client (specifically, mysql Ver 14.14 Distrib 5.1.41, for debian-linux-gnu (x86_64) using readline 6.1), like so:
SELECT * FROM table WHERE foo;
Unfortunately, if the value of any numeric field exceeds 10^6, this client displays the result in scientific notation, which makes reading the results difficult.
I could correct the problem by FORMAT-ing each of the fields in my query, but there are many of them and many tables I would like to query. Instead I'm hoping to find a client variable or flag I can set to disable scientific notation for all queries.
I have not been able to find one in the --help or the man page, nor searching Google or this site. Instead all I find are discussions of preserving/removing scientific notation when using <insert-programming-language>'s MySQL API.
Thank you for any tips.
::edit::
Here's an example table ...
mysql> desc foo;
+--------------+-------------+------+-----+-------------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default |
+--------------+-------------+------+-----+-------------------+
| date | date | NO | PRI | NULL |
| name | varchar(20) | NO | PRI | NULL |
| val | float | NO | | NULL |
| last_updated | timestamp | NO | | CURRENT_TIMESTAMP |
+--------------+-------------+------+-----+-------------------+
and some example values ...
mysql> select * from foo where date='20120207';
+------------+--------+--------------+---------------------+
| date | name | val | last_updated |
+------------+--------+--------------+---------------------+
| 2012-02-07 | A | 88779.5 | 2012-02-07 13:38:14 |
| 2012-02-07 | B | 1.00254e+06 | 2012-02-07 13:38:14 |
| 2012-02-07 | C | 78706.5 | 2012-02-07 13:38:15 |
+------------+--------+--------------+---------------------+
Now, the actual values I loaded into the third field are:
88779.5, 1002539.25, 78706.5390625
and they can be seen exactly if I manipulate the value:
mysql> select date, name, ROUND(val, 10), last_updated from foo where ...
+------------+---+--------------------+---------------------+
| 2012-02-07 | A | 88779.5000000000 | 2012-02-07 13:38:14 |
| 2012-02-07 | B | 1002539.2500000000 | 2012-02-07 13:38:14 |
| 2012-02-07 | C | 78706.5390625000 | 2012-02-07 13:38:15 |
Something in the client seems to be enforcing that I only be allowed to see six significant figures, even though there are more in the table.
If a query such as
mysql> select ROUND(*, 2) from foo ...
were possible, that would be great! Otherwise I can't really take the time to individually wrap 100 column names in "ROUND()" whenever I need to inspect some data.
Interestingly, I occasionally use a phpMyAdmin interface to browse the contents of some of these tables, and that interface also has this 6 significant figure limitation. So it's not limited to just the CLI.
create table testLength( i int);And there doesn't seem to be an issue with the command line client bringing back the exploded values. – technocrat Feb 14 at 19:10