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I've been searching around and the question was asked a few times, but no-one seem to be able to give a definite answer to it. How do you specify the integer length for the table column using Schema?

I've seen someone suggesting:

$table->integer('post')->length(11);

But that doesn't work - at least with Laravel 4.2 - it still produces the column as int(10).

Is there a built in method to specify the integer length?

1
  • 1
    Is this by any chance related to creating foreign keys between tables?
    – jeteon
    Mar 25, 2015 at 2:18

7 Answers 7

20

If you're using MySQL, you can't specify the length of an integer column. You can only choose between one of the available integer types, described at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/integer-types.html.

Hence, you cannot set the integer length in Laravel either.

You can only choose one of the available types described at Laravel 4.2 Database Migration Creating Column.

4
  • 2
    But MySQL's integer length goes up to 11 - not 10, which seem to be the default one? Same for TINYINT which goes up to 4 etc. Sep 10, 2014 at 18:56
  • 13
    It goes up to 11 for signed integers. For unsigned integers (and then I mean the INT type), it goes up to 10.
    – lowerends
    Sep 10, 2014 at 18:59
  • 1
    Makes sense - thanks, although it's a shame that you cannot specify the length - it could be useful in some scenarios. Sep 10, 2014 at 19:02
  • 3
    Actually, you can specify the length of an integer column in MySQL. See the Numeric Type Attributes of the same docs.The length in this case is not the size of the data but the display width of the output. Typically, boolean columns will be stored as TINYINT(1) even though the TINYINT can have a display width of up to 4.
    – jeteon
    Mar 25, 2015 at 2:11
14

Thought I'd create an easy-to-copy-and-paste for general situations table.
Signed if you do require negative values and unsigned if you do not.

| Type                | Eloquent (Schema Builder)                 | Min     | Max    |
| ------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ------- | ------ |
| TINYINT (Signed)    | $table->signedTinyInteger('foo')          | -128    | 127    |
| TINYINT (Unsigned)  | $table->unsignedTinyInteger('foo')        | 0       | 255    |
| SMALLINT (Signed)   | $table->signedSmallInteger('foo')         | -32768  | 32767  |
| SMALLINT (Unsigned) | $table->unsignedSmallInteger('foo')       | 0       | 65535  |

For larger Integer types, see: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/integer-types.html

4

I'm guessing that you want to specify a length of 10 to match an increment id (when declaring foreign keys). If so then you have to use:

$table->unsignedInteger('some_id_reference');
2

Now, in Laravel 5:

$table->addColumn('integer', 'post', ['length' => '10']); // Creates INT(10)
$table->addColumn('integer', 'post', ['length' => '10'])->unsigned(); // Creates Unsigned INT(10)
$table->unsignedInteger('post'); // Creates Unsigned INT(10)

$table->integer('post'); // Creates INT(11)
$table->integer('post')->unsigned(); // Creates Unsigned INT(11)
0
$table->bigInteger('variable');
$table->integer('variable');
$table->mediumInteger('variable'); 
$table->smallInteger('variable');
$table->tinyInteger('variable');
$table->unsignedBigInteger('variable');
$table->unsignedMediumInteger('variable'); 
$table->unsignedSmallInteger('variable');  
$table->unsignedTinyInteger('variable');  

https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/migrations

0

Table 11.1 Required Storage and Range for Integer Types Supported by MySQL

I think it will help for you.

enter image description here

-1

yes, it is possible to change the length of a default column by using:

$table->string('any_text',35)->change();

you can also make it nullable by using:

$table->string('any_text',35)->nullable()->change();

I hope it works for you :)

1
  • The question was about integer column, not string.
    – Wirone
    Aug 14, 2020 at 8:25

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