Close Search Box
Search Box

Search: From:

Close
Newsletter

9Tutorials to your Inbox



8 Essential MySQL Queries

8 Essential MySQL Queries
Author lv1 (3100/5000)
8,013 views
1 Star2 Star3Star4 Star5 Star (11 votes, average: 4.45 out of 5)

Here”s a list of queries that I found myself using very often and that save me a lot of development time. I hope you can benefit from them as well.

1. Create a quick backup

Before testing a new piece of code you suspect might mess up data in one or more tables it”s always a good practice to create a backup. To quickly create a backup copy of a table, use this query:

The query creates a table backup which is a copy of the original table and includes both structure and content.

2. Create/change/restore a password

Many applications store MD5-crypted passwords in the database. If you want to quickly create a new MD5-ed password, or you have forgotten your password, use the following query to get a new one:

This statement will give you “b5bab206cc8002bf7c10d47b24a2d0e6″ which is the encrypted version of the string “somepasshere”. There are other function that crypt stings in MySQL using different algorithms, most notably PASSWORD() which is using MySQL”s own crypting algorithm.

3. Working with Unix timestamps

To convert from human-readable MySQL date/time format into Unix timestamp, use: SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP(); Without parameters, this will give you the timestamp of the current date and time. With parameters, you can get timestamp for any date. For example: SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP(”2006-12-31″); This statement gives you the timestamp 1167541200. To get a date back from a timestamp, use: SELECT FROM_UNIXTIME(1167541200); This results in “2006-12-31 00:00:00″

4. Quick increment

To increment an integer stored in a table (useful for stats for example), use: UPDATE sometable SET counter=counter+1 WHERE …; Here “counter” is the name of the field that stores the integer value.

5. Toggle a value

If you have a field that stores a Boolean type of value, like 0/1 or yes/no, you can easily toggle the value with one if-statement:

6. Find/replace

Say you want to update a piece of text if all records in a table field. REPLACE() comes to the rescue:

This statement will replace all occurrences of the string “black” with the string “white” in all records of the “field” column. Apart from the string “white” the rest of the text contained in the field will be left as is.

7. Get a random record

If you want to select a random row in your table, you can use the statement:

8. Upper/lower case

If you want to modify a value and make it upper or lowercase, use the UPPER or LOWER functions, like this:

I hope you learned something new today which will make your everyday life as a developer just a bit easier. Thank you for reading!

Author: Stoyan Stefanov is a web developer from Montreal, Canada, Zend Certified Engineer

del.icio.us:8 Essential MySQL Queries digg:8 Essential MySQL Queries spurl:8 Essential MySQL Queries newsvine:8 Essential MySQL Queries blinklist:8 Essential MySQL Queries furl:8 Essential MySQL Queries reddit:8 Essential MySQL Queries blogmarks:8 Essential MySQL Queries Y!:8 Essential MySQL Queries magnolia:8 Essential MySQL Queries segnalo:8 Essential MySQL Queries

Post a Comment »








Safari hates me

Comment Guidelines

  • Hyperlinks are automatically generated.
  • <em>italic</em>
  • <strong>bold</strong>
  1. Akilan September 19, 2007

    very nice & useful

  2. Ravi Choudhary December 14, 2007

    Really nice stuff, really useful…..keep going

  3. karthi July 29, 2008

    thanks