Suppose that you have several pets in your home (your menagerie) and you would like to keep track of various types of information about them. You can do so by creating tables to hold your data and loading them with the desired information. Then you can answer different sorts of questions about your animals by retrieving data from the tables. This section shows you how to perform the following operations:
- Create a database
- Create a table
- Load data into the table
- Retrieve data from the table in various ways
- Use multiple tables
Use the
SHOW
statement to find out what databases currently exist on the server: mysql> SHOW DATABASES;
+----------+
| Database |
+----------+
| mysql |
| test |
| tmp |
+----------+
The mysql
database describes user access privileges. The test
database often is available as a workspace for users to try things out. The list of databases displayed by the statement may be different on your machine;
SHOW DATABASES
does not show databases that you have no privileges for if you do not have the SHOW DATABASES
privilege.If the
test
database exists, try to access it: mysql> USE test
Database changed
USE
, like QUIT
, does not require a semicolon. (You can terminate such statements with a semicolon if you like; it does no harm.) The USE
statement is special in another way, too: it must be given on a single line. You can use the
test
database (if you have access to it) for the examples that follow, but anything you create in that database can be removed by anyone else with access to it. For this reason, you should probably ask your MySQL administrator for permission to use a database of your own. Suppose that you want to call yours menagerie
. The administrator needs to execute a command like this: mysql> GRANT ALL ON menagerie.* TO 'your_mysql_name'@'your_client_host';
where your_mysql_name
is the MySQL user name assigned to you and your_client_host
is the host from which you connect to the server.
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