MySQL provides standard SQL pattern matching as well as a form of pattern matching based on extended regular expressions similar to those used by Unix utilities such as vi, grep, and sed.
          SQL pattern matching enables you to use _
          to match any single character and % to
          match an arbitrary number of characters (including zero
          characters). In MySQL, SQL patterns are case-insensitive by
          default. Some examples are shown here. Do not use
          = or <> when you
          use SQL patterns. Use the LIKE or
          NOT LIKE comparison operators
          instead.
        
          To find names beginning with b:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE name LIKE 'b%';
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| name   | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death      |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| Buffy  | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL       |
| Bowser | Diane  | dog     | m    | 1989-08-31 | 1995-07-29 |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
          To find names ending with fy:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE name LIKE '%fy';
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| name   | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| Fluffy | Harold | cat     | f    | 1993-02-04 | NULL  |
| Buffy  | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL  |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
          To find names containing a w:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE name LIKE '%w%';
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| name     | owner | species | sex  | birth      | death      |
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| Claws    | Gwen  | cat     | m    | 1994-03-17 | NULL       |
| Bowser   | Diane | dog     | m    | 1989-08-31 | 1995-07-29 |
| Whistler | Gwen  | bird    | NULL | 1997-12-09 | NULL       |
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+
          To find names containing exactly five characters, use five
          instances of the _ pattern character:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE name LIKE '_____';
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| name  | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| Claws | Gwen   | cat     | m    | 1994-03-17 | NULL  |
| Buffy | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL  |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
          The other type of pattern matching provided by MySQL uses
          extended regular expressions. When you test for a match for
          this type of pattern, use the
          REGEXP_LIKE() function (or the
          REGEXP or
          RLIKE
          operators, which are synonyms for
          REGEXP_LIKE()).
        
The following list describes some characteristics of extended regular expressions:
- .matches any single character.
- A character class - [...]matches any character within the brackets. For example,- [abc]matches- a,- b, or- c. To name a range of characters, use a dash.- [a-z]matches any letter, whereas- [0-9]matches any digit.
- *matches zero or more instances of the thing preceding it. For example,- x*matches any number of- xcharacters,- [0-9]*matches any number of digits, and- .*matches any number of anything.
- A regular expression pattern match succeeds if the pattern matches anywhere in the value being tested. (This differs from a - LIKEpattern match, which succeeds only if the pattern matches the entire value.)
- To anchor a pattern so that it must match the beginning or end of the value being tested, use - ^at the beginning or- $at the end of the pattern.
          To demonstrate how extended regular expressions work, the
          LIKE queries shown previously are
          rewritten here to use
          REGEXP_LIKE().
        
          To find names beginning with b, use
          ^ to match the beginning of the name:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, '^b');
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| name   | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death      |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| Buffy  | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL       |
| Bowser | Diane  | dog     | m    | 1979-08-31 | 1995-07-29 |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+------------+
          To force a regular expression comparison to be case-sensitive,
          use a case-sensitive collation, or use the
          BINARY keyword to make one of the
          strings a binary string, or specify the c
          match-control character. Each of these queries matches only
          lowercase b at the beginning of a name:
        
SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, '^b' COLLATE utf8mb4_0900_as_cs);
SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, BINARY '^b');
SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, '^b', 'c');
          To find names ending with fy, use
          $ to match the end of the name:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, 'fy$');
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| name   | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| Fluffy | Harold | cat     | f    | 1993-02-04 | NULL  |
| Buffy  | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL  |
+--------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
          To find names containing a w, use this
          query:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, 'w');
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| name     | owner | species | sex  | birth      | death      |
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+
| Claws    | Gwen  | cat     | m    | 1994-03-17 | NULL       |
| Bowser   | Diane | dog     | m    | 1989-08-31 | 1995-07-29 |
| Whistler | Gwen  | bird    | NULL | 1997-12-09 | NULL       |
+----------+-------+---------+------+------------+------------+Because a regular expression pattern matches if it occurs anywhere in the value, it is not necessary in the previous query to put a wildcard on either side of the pattern to get it to match the entire value as would be true with an SQL pattern.
          To find names containing exactly five characters, use
          ^ and $ to match the
          beginning and end of the name, and five instances of
          . in between:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, '^.....$');
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| name  | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| Claws | Gwen   | cat     | m    | 1994-03-17 | NULL  |
| Buffy | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL  |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
          You could also write the previous query using the
          {
          (“repeat-n}n-times”)
          operator:
        
mysql> SELECT * FROM pet WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(name, '^.{5}$');
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| name  | owner  | species | sex  | birth      | death |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+
| Claws | Gwen   | cat     | m    | 1994-03-17 | NULL  |
| Buffy | Harold | dog     | f    | 1989-05-13 | NULL  |
+-------+--------+---------+------+------------+-------+For more information about the syntax for regular expressions, see Regular Expressions.