ENUM
and SET
columns provide an efficient way to define columns that can contain only a given set of values. See Section 11.3.5, “The ENUM Type”, and Section 11.3.6, “The SET Type”.
Unless strict mode is disabled (not recommended, but see Section 5.1.11, “Server SQL Modes”), the definition of a ENUM
or SET
column acts as a constraint on values entered into the column. An error occurs for values that do not satisfy these conditions:
An
ENUM
value must be one of those listed in the column definition, or the internal numeric equivalent thereof. The value cannot be the error value (that is, 0 or the empty string). For a column defined asENUM('a','b','c')
, values such as''
,'d'
, or'ax'
are invalid and are rejected.A
SET
value must be the empty string or a value consisting only of the values listed in the column definition separated by commas. For a column defined asSET('a','b','c')
, values such as'd'
or'a,b,c,d'
are invalid and are rejected.
Errors for invalid values can be suppressed in strict mode if you use INSERT IGNORE
or UPDATE IGNORE
. In this case, a warning is generated rather than an error. For ENUM
, the value is inserted as the error member (0
). For SET
, the value is inserted as given except that any invalid substrings are deleted. For example, 'a,x,b,y'
results in a value of 'a,b'
.
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