How can I ignore the difference between upper and lower case when searching with mysql
6 Answers
Do something like this:
SELECT user
FROM users
WHERE UPPER( user ) = UPPER( 'moustafa' );
Basically you're converting your result to one case and comparing against the search term which is also converted to upper case, effectively ignoring case.
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5+1: Driving both sides of the evaluation to the same case (UPPER or LOWER) will provide case insensitive searching. Caveat: Use of a function on the column will not use an index if one exists. Jun 30, 2010 at 15:44
The UPPER
and LOWER
functions can be used, but you can also affect the case-sensitivity by selecting the appropriate collation and/or column type.
For example, latin1_general_cs
is case-sensitive with both VARCHAR
and VARBINARY
:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `case_sensitive`;
CREATE TABLE `case_sensitive` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`nonbinary` VARCHAR(255),
`binary` VARBINARY(255),
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB COLLATE latin1_general_cs;
INSERT INTO `case_sensitive` (`nonbinary`, `binary`) VALUES ('A', 'A');
SELECT * FROM `case_sensitive` WHERE `nonbinary` = 'A';
+----+-----------+--------+
| id | nonbinary | binary |
+----+-----------+--------+
| 1 | A | A |
+----+-----------+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
SELECT * FROM `case_sensitive` WHERE `binary` = 'A';
+----+-----------+--------+
| id | nonbinary | binary |
+----+-----------+--------+
| 1 | A | A |
+----+-----------+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
SELECT * FROM `case_sensitive` WHERE `nonbinary` = 'a';
Empty set (0.00 sec)
SELECT * FROM `case_sensitive` WHERE `binary` = 'a';
Empty set (0.00 sec)
Whereas latin1_general_ci
is case-insensitive with VARCHAR
, and case-sensitive with VARBINARY
:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `case_insensitive`;
CREATE TABLE `case_insensitive` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`nonbinary` VARCHAR(255),
`binary` VARBINARY(255),
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB COLLATE latin1_general_ci;
INSERT INTO `case_insensitive` (`nonbinary`, `binary`) VALUES ('A', 'A');
SELECT * FROM `case_insensitive` WHERE `nonbinary` = 'A';
+----+-----------+--------+
| id | nonbinary | binary |
+----+-----------+--------+
| 1 | A | A |
+----+-----------+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
SELECT * FROM `case_insensitive` WHERE `binary` = 'A';
+----+-----------+--------+
| id | nonbinary | binary |
+----+-----------+--------+
| 1 | A | A |
+----+-----------+--------+
SELECT * FROM `case_insensitive` WHERE `nonbinary` = 'a';
+----+-----------+--------+
| id | nonbinary | binary |
+----+-----------+--------+
| 1 | A | A |
+----+-----------+--------+
SELECT * FROM `case_insensitive` WHERE `binary` = 'a';
Empty set (0.00 sec)
You should therefore pick a collation and column type that is most suited to your needs. You can find more information here:
Case Sensitivity in String Searches
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/case-sensitivity.html
Character Sets and Collations in MySQL
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/charset-mysql.html
Character Sets and Collations That MySQL Supports
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/charset-charsets.html
Generally, you should use WHERE UPPER(COLUMNNAME) = UPPER('valuetocompare').
Alternatively, you culd use WHERE UPPER(COLUMNNAME) like UPPER('%valuetocompare%') if you want to do a substring search
i use utf8_unicode_(CI)-case-insensitive collate on the column your searching....and it works
SELECT * FROM table_name WHERE column_name1 LIKE '%A%' OR column_name1 LIKE '%a%';
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1Only copy-pasting code is not enough, you have to explain what it does and how.– peterhDec 9, 2015 at 5:31