When I use the MySQL client to create database, if I type below command:
create database nice-day;
Then it tells me that:
ERROR 1064 (42000): 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 '-day' at line 1
But when I use phpAdmin tool, I can create the database named nice-day. What is the problem?
The - character is not considered to be part of an identifier in SQL, so the database name must be quoted:
CREATE DATABASE `nice-day`
In general, though, it is advisable to use underscores (_) instead of dashes in database names to avoid this issue.
Please use backticks "`" (the key before the 1 on a standard US 101 keyboard).
as per http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/identifiers.html
The identifier quote character is the backtick (“`”):
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i was testing a software on my computer , i have a mysql installed on it . now i have transfered this software to a server . no any mysql command is working
for example this is the command that was working on my computer
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM camera WHERE stored=3;
when i try to execute it on my server here is the result
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 'stored=3' at line 1
but this one is working
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM camera WHERE camera.stored=3;
is there any way to restore it without needing to define the table name ?
Stored is a MySQL Reserved Word, so MySQL thinks you are intending to use that Reserved Word.
When you qualify it with the Table Name, then it knows what you are talking about.
UPDATE: You could wrap stored in back ticks (shown below) so it's treated as text and not a Reserved Word.
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM camera WHERE `stored`=3;
I am trying to use mysql library to request my database.
I need to use the syntax with query placeholders, so I tried a simple request:
connection.query('DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS ?;', ['mydb']);
But this leads to :
'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 \'\'mydb\'\' at line 1'
The query is indeed:
'DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS \'mydb\';'
So how is this supposed to work actually ?
The MySQL notation for this is:
DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS `mydb`
Since you're escaping it as a string, that's not a database reference it can drop.
Some drivers support alternate placeholders for this very reason:
DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS ??
Normally you can't use placeholder values for things like databases, columns or tables as these are treated differently. This is a limitation of the driver.
You just need to be careful on user-supplied values and names with irregular characters in them. These need to be escaped according to MySQL schema identifier rules.
This question already has answers here:
When to use single quotes, double quotes, and backticks in MySQL
(13 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
I tried to create Database with:
CREATE DATABASE 'mynewdb';
and got:
ERROR 1064 (42000): 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 ''mynewdb'' at line 1
Why? What did I wrong?
Don't use quotes:
CREATE DATABASE mynewdb;
You have to remove your quotes or use backticks such:
CREATE DATABASE mynewdb;
or
CREATE DATABASE `mynewdb`;
Backticks are to be used for database, table and column identifiers, but are only necessary when the identifier is a MySQL reserved keyword, or when the identifier contains whitespace characters or characters beyond a limited set (see below) It is often recommended to avoid using reserved keywords as column or table identifiers when possible, avoiding the quoting issue.
Here a very good answer When to use single quotes, double quotes, and backticks in MySQL.
I am having problems getting the SQL "use" command to work in MySQL 5.7.
I have a database 'mydb' with a 'character' table. (At the moment, the table is empty, but I don't think that should matter here).
Explicitly using "use" gives me an error:
use mydb;
select count(*) from character;
Error Code: 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 'character' at line 1 0.000 sec
However, the following line, which does not use "use", works okay:
select count(*) from mydb.character;
Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? Admittedly, I am quite new to SQL. The full output is shown below:
character is a reserved keyword in MySQL. Hence you get the error when you select from that table. Escape with `` to avoid this. Or use names other than reserved keywords for your tablenames.
Reserved Keywords in MySQL
I am using Sybase Power Designer to create a database from a physical data model (Sybase creates an SQL file) . When i import the SQL file with phpMyAdmin I have the following error:
#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 'if exists(select 1 from sys.sysforeignkey where role='FK_ARTWORK_CREATES_ARTIST'' at line 7 .
Any ideas? Could this error appear due to errors on the physical model or there is another problem?
This is the code :
if exists(select 1 from sys.sysforeignkey where role='FK_ARTWORK_HAS_BUY') then
alter table artwork
delete foreign key FK_ARTWORK_HAS_BUY
end if;
The error you are getting is from MySQL. Regardless of the tool used to generate SQL, the database seems to be MySQL (or something is terribly wrong with your systems if they are confused and think they are MySQL).
The MySQL if statement (documented here) has to be inside a stored program. That means that this code only compiles inside a stored procedure, user defined function, or trigger. It doesn't "just work" on its own.
In addition, MySQL doesn't have sys tables. It uses information_schema tables. My strongest suggestion is to use tools appropriate for your actual database. If you are using a tool to generate Sybase, then use Sybase as the destination database. If you are using MySQL, then use a tool to generate MySQL code. Or, better yet, learn how to write the commands yourself.
Finally, if you intend to use Sybase, then connect to the correct database and your problem should be fixed.
As I can't post here, and sqlfiddle.com temporary unavailable, I decided to post code with correct syntax for Sybase on the PasteBin