The repertoire of a character set is the collection of characters in the set.
String expressions have a repertoire attribute, which can have two values:
ASCII: The expression can contain only ASCII characters; that is, characters in the Unicode rangeU+0000toU+007F.UNICODE: The expression can contain characters in the Unicode rangeU+0000toU+10FFFF. This includes characters in the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP) range (U+0000toU+FFFF) and supplementary characters outside the BMP range (U+10000toU+10FFFF).
The ASCII range is a subset of
UNICODE range, so a string with
ASCII repertoire can be converted safely
without loss of information to the character set of any string
with UNICODE repertoire. It can also be
converted safely to any character set that is a superset of the
ascii character set. (All MySQL character
sets are supersets of ascii with the
exception of swe7, which reuses some
punctuation characters for Swedish accented characters.)
The use of repertoire enables character set conversion in expressions for many cases where MySQL would otherwise return an “illegal mix of collations” error when the rules for collation coercibility are insufficient to resolve ambiguities. (For information about coercibility, see Section 12.8.4, “Collation Coercibility in Expressions”.)
The following discussion provides examples of expressions and their repertoires, and describes how the use of repertoire changes string expression evaluation:
The repertoire for a string constant depends on string content and may differ from the repertoire of the string character set. Consider these statements:
SET NAMES utf8mb4; SELECT 'abc'; SELECT _utf8mb4'def';Although the character set is
utf8mb4in each of the preceding cases, the strings do not actually contain any characters outside the ASCII range, so their repertoire isASCIIrather thanUNICODE.A column having the
asciicharacter set hasASCIIrepertoire because of its character set. In the following table,c1hasASCIIrepertoire:CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 CHAR(1) CHARACTER SET ascii);The following example illustrates how repertoire enables a result to be determined in a case where an error occurs without repertoire:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( c1 CHAR(1) CHARACTER SET latin1, c2 CHAR(1) CHARACTER SET ascii ); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('a','b'); SELECT CONCAT(c1,c2) FROM t1;Without repertoire, this error occurs:
ERROR 1267 (HY000): Illegal mix of collations (latin1_swedish_ci,IMPLICIT) and (ascii_general_ci,IMPLICIT) for operation 'concat'Using repertoire, subset to superset (
asciitolatin1) conversion can occur and a result is returned:+---------------+ | CONCAT(c1,c2) | +---------------+ | ab | +---------------+Functions with one string argument inherit the repertoire of their argument. The result of
UPPER(_utf8mb4'abc')hasASCIIrepertoire because its argument hasASCIIrepertoire. (Despite the_utf8mb4introducer, the string'abc'contains no characters outside the ASCII range.)For functions that return a string but do not have string arguments and use
character_set_connectionas the result character set, the result repertoire isASCIIifcharacter_set_connectionisascii, andUNICODEotherwise:FORMAT(numeric_column, 4);Use of repertoire changes how MySQL evaluates the following example:
SET NAMES ascii; CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b VARCHAR(10) CHARACTER SET latin1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,'b'); SELECT CONCAT(FORMAT(a, 4), b) FROM t1;Without repertoire, this error occurs:
ERROR 1267 (HY000): Illegal mix of collations (ascii_general_ci,COERCIBLE) and (latin1_swedish_ci,IMPLICIT) for operation 'concat'With repertoire, a result is returned:
+-------------------------+ | CONCAT(FORMAT(a, 4), b) | +-------------------------+ | 1.0000b | +-------------------------+Functions with two or more string arguments use the “widest” argument repertoire for the result repertoire, where
UNICODEis wider thanASCII. Consider the followingCONCAT()calls:CONCAT(_ucs2 X'0041', _ucs2 X'0042') CONCAT(_ucs2 X'0041', _ucs2 X'00C2')For the first call, the repertoire is
ASCIIbecause both arguments are within the ASCII range. For the second call, the repertoire isUNICODEbecause the second argument is outside the ASCII range.The repertoire for function return values is determined based on the repertoire of only those arguments that affect the result's character set and collation.
IF(column1 < column2, 'smaller', 'greater')The result repertoire is
ASCIIbecause the two string arguments (the second argument and the third argument) both haveASCIIrepertoire. The first argument does not matter for the result repertoire, even if the expression uses string values.