If I have a VARCHAR of 200 characters and that I put a string of 100 characters, will it use 200 bytes or it will just use the actual size of the string?
3 Answers
100 characters.
This is the var (variable) in varchar
: you only store what you enter (and an extra 2 bytes to store length upto 65535)
If it was char(200)
then you'd always store 200 characters, padded with 100 spaces
See the docs: "The CHAR and VARCHAR Types"
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54To be clear: Storing a string 100 characters in a
varchar(200)
field will take 101 bytes. Storing a string of 100 characters in avarchar(256)
field will take 102 bytes. This is why you seevarchar(255)
so frequently; 255 characters is the longest string you can store in MySQL'svarchar
type with only one byte of overhead. Anything larger requires two bytes of overhead.– rinogoFeb 25, 2015 at 0:34 -
4@rinogo Doesn't that depend on the character set? Are you assuming ASCII or what?– mpenFeb 3, 2016 at 0:04
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@mpen I'm not sure, but that's a great question! If you track down the answer, please report back here! :)– rinogoFeb 3, 2016 at 0:08
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9@rinogo The official MySQL docs are fuzzy on this subject but I'm pretty sure in
varchar(N)
N
is the number of characters, sovarchar(255) charset utf8mb4
would actually use up to 1021 bytes. I'm not sure if it will always use the full number of bytes or what; I guess it depends how it's packed.– mpenFeb 3, 2016 at 0:40
VARCHAR means that it's a variable-length character, so it's only going to take as much space as is necessary. But if you knew something about the underlying structure, it may make sense to restrict VARCHAR to some maximum amount.
For instance, if you were storing comments from the user, you may limit the comment field to only 4000 characters; if so, it doesn't really make any sense to make the sql table have a field that's larger than VARCHAR(4000).
Actually, it will takes 101 bytes.
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