In MySQL, the gb18030 character set
          corresponds to the Chinese National Standard GB
          18030-2005: Information technology — Chinese coded
          character set, which is the official character set
          of the People's Republic of China (PRC).
Characteristics of the MySQL gb18030 Character Set
- Supports all code points defined by the GB 18030-2005 standard. Unassigned code points in the ranges (GB+8431A439, GB+90308130) and (GB+E3329A36, GB+EF39EF39) are treated as ' - ?' (0x3F). Conversion of unassigned code points returns '- ?'.
- Supports UPPER and LOWER conversion for all GB18030 code points. Case folding defined by Unicode is also supported (based on - CaseFolding-6.3.0.txt).
- Supports Conversion of data to and from other character sets. 
- Supports SQL statements such as - SET NAMES.
- Supports comparison between - gb18030strings, and between- gb18030strings and strings of other character sets. There is a conversion if strings have different character sets. Comparisons that include or ignore trailing spaces are also supported.
- The private use area (U+E000, U+F8FF) in Unicode is mapped to - gb18030.
- There is no mapping between (U+D800, U+DFFF) and GB18030. Attempted conversion of code points in this range returns ' - ?'.
- If an incoming sequence is illegal, an error or warning is returned. If an illegal sequence is used in - CONVERT(), an error is returned. Otherwise, a warning is returned.
- For consistency with - utf8mb3and- utf8mb4, UPPER is not supported for ligatures.
- Searches for ligatures also match uppercase ligatures when using the - gb18030_unicode_520_cicollation.
- If a character has more than one uppercase character, the chosen uppercase character is the one whose lowercase is the character itself. 
- The minimum multibyte length is 1 and the maximum is 4. The character set determines the length of a sequence using the first 1 or 2 bytes. 
Supported Collations
- gb18030_bin: A binary collation.
- gb18030_chinese_ci: The default collation, which supports Pinyin. Sorting of non-Chinese characters is based on the order of the original sort key. The original sort key is- GB(UPPER(ch))if- UPPER(ch)exists. Otherwise, the original sort key is- GB(ch). Chinese characters are sorted according to the Pinyin collation defined in the Unicode Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR 24). Non-Chinese characters are sorted before Chinese characters with the exception of- GB+FE39FE39, which is the code point maximum.
- gb18030_unicode_520_ci: A Unicode collation. Use this collation if you need to ensure that ligatures are sorted correctly.