The concept of the NULL
value is a common
source of confusion for newcomers to SQL, who often think that
NULL
is the same thing as an empty string
''
. This is not the case. For example, the
following statements are completely different:
mysql> INSERT INTO my_table (phone) VALUES (NULL);
mysql> INSERT INTO my_table (phone) VALUES ('');
Both statements insert a value into the
phone
column, but the first inserts a
NULL
value and the second inserts an empty
string. The meaning of the first can be regarded as
“phone number is not known” and the meaning of
the second can be regarded as “the person is known to
have no phone, and thus no phone number.”
To help with NULL
handling, you can use the
IS NULL
and IS
NOT NULL
operators and the
IFNULL()
function.
In SQL, the NULL
value is never true in
comparison to any other value, even NULL
.
An expression that contains NULL
always
produces a NULL
value unless otherwise
indicated in the documentation for the operators and functions
involved in the expression. All columns in the following
example return NULL
:
mysql> SELECT NULL, 1+NULL, CONCAT('Invisible',NULL);
To search for column values that are NULL
,
you cannot use an expr = NULL
test. The
following statement returns no rows, because expr =
NULL
is never true for any expression:
mysql> SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone = NULL;
To look for NULL
values, you must use the
IS NULL
test. The following
statements show how to find the NULL
phone
number and the empty phone number:
mysql> SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone IS NULL;
mysql> SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone = '';
See Section 5.3.4.6, “Working with NULL Values”, for additional information and examples.
You can add an index on a column that can have
NULL
values if you are using the
MyISAM
, InnoDB
, or
MEMORY
storage engine. Otherwise, you must
declare an indexed column NOT NULL
, and you
cannot insert NULL
into the column.
When reading data with LOAD
DATA
, empty or missing columns are updated with
''
. To load a NULL
value
into a column, use \N
in the data file. The
literal word NULL
may also be used under
some circumstances. See Section 15.2.9, “LOAD DATA Statement”.
When using DISTINCT
, GROUP
BY
, or ORDER BY
, all
NULL
values are regarded as equal.
When using ORDER BY
,
NULL
values are presented first, or last if
you specify DESC
to sort in descending
order.
Aggregate (group) functions such as
COUNT()
,
MIN()
, and
SUM()
ignore
NULL
values. The exception to this is
COUNT(*)
, which counts rows and
not individual column values. For example, the following
statement produces two counts. The first is a count of the
number of rows in the table, and the second is a count of the
number of non-NULL
values in the
age
column:
mysql> SELECT COUNT(*), COUNT(age) FROM person;
For some data types, MySQL handles NULL
values in special ways. For example, if you insert
NULL
into an integer or floating-point
column that has the AUTO_INCREMENT
attribute, the next number in the sequence is inserted. Under
certain conditions, if you insert NULL
into
a TIMESTAMP
column, the current
date and time is inserted; this behavior depends in part on
the server SQL mode (see Section 7.1.11, “Server SQL Modes”) as well
as the value of the
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
system variable.