1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120
|
#
# Test of cast function
#
select CAST(1-2 AS UNSIGNED);
select CAST(CAST(1-2 AS UNSIGNED) AS SIGNED INTEGER);
select CONVERT('-1',UNSIGNED);
select cast(-5 as unsigned) | 1, cast(-5 as unsigned) & -1;
select cast(-5 as unsigned) -1, cast(-5 as unsigned) + 1;
select ~5, cast(~5 as signed);
explain extended select ~5, cast(~5 as signed);
select cast(5 as unsigned) -6.0;
select cast(NULL as signed), cast(1/0 as signed);
select cast(NULL as unsigned), cast(1/0 as unsigned);
select cast("A" as binary) = "a", cast(BINARY "a" as CHAR) = "A";
select cast("2001-1-1" as DATE), cast("2001-1-1" as DATETIME);
select cast("1:2:3" as TIME);
select CONVERT("2004-01-22 21:45:33",DATE);
select CONVERT(DATE "2004-01-22 21:45:33" USING latin1);
select CONVERT(DATE "2004-01-22 21:45:33",CHAR);
select CONVERT(DATE "2004-01-22 21:45:33",CHAR(4));
select CONVERT(DATE "2004-01-22 21:45:33",BINARY(4));
select CAST(DATE "2004-01-22 21:45:33" AS BINARY(4));
#
# Character set convertion
#
set names binary;
select cast(_latin1'test' as char character set latin2);
select cast(_koi8r'' as char character set cp1251);
create table t1 select cast(_koi8r'' as char character set cp1251) as t;
show create table t1;
drop table t1;
#
# CAST to CHAR with/without length
#
select
cast(_latin1'ab' AS char) as c1,
cast(_latin1'a ' AS char) as c2,
cast(_latin1'abc' AS char(2)) as c3,
cast(_latin1'a ' AS char(2)) as c4,
cast(_latin1'a' AS char(2)) as c5;
create table t1 select
cast(_latin1'ab' AS char) as c1,
cast(_latin1'a ' AS char) as c2,
cast(_latin1'abc' AS char(2)) as c3,
cast(_latin1'a ' AS char(2)) as c4,
cast(_latin1'a' AS char(2)) as c5;
select * from t1;
show create table t1;
drop table t1;
#
# CAST to NCHAR with/without length
#
select
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar) as c1,
cast(_koi8r' ' AS nchar) as c2,
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar(2)) as c3,
cast(_koi8r' ' AS nchar(2)) as c4,
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar(2)) as c5;
create table t1 select
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar) as c1,
cast(_koi8r' ' AS nchar) as c2,
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar(2)) as c3,
cast(_koi8r' ' AS nchar(2)) as c4,
cast(_koi8r'' AS nchar(2)) as c5;
select * from t1;
show create table t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Bug 2202
# CAST from BINARY to non-BINARY and from non-BINARY to BINARY
#
create table t1 (a binary(10), b char(10) character set koi8r);
insert into t1 values (_binary'',_binary'');
select a,b,cast(a as char character set cp1251),cast(b as binary) from t1;
set names koi8r;
select a,b,cast(a as char character set cp1251),cast(b as binary) from t1;
set names cp1251;
select a,b,cast(a as char character set cp1251),cast(b as binary) from t1;
drop table t1;
set names binary;
#
# The following should be fixed in 4.1
#
select cast("2001-1-1" as date) = "2001-01-01";
select cast("2001-1-1" as datetime) = "2001-01-01 00:00:00";
select cast("1:2:3" as TIME) = "1:02:03";
select cast(NULL as DATE);
select cast(NULL as BINARY);
#
# Bug #5228 ORDER BY CAST(enumcol) sorts incorrectly under certain conditions
#
CREATE TABLE t1 (a enum ('aac','aab','aaa') not null);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('aaa'),('aab'),('aac');
# these two should be in enum order
SELECT a, CAST(a AS CHAR) FROM t1 ORDER BY CAST(a AS UNSIGNED) ;
SELECT a, CAST(a AS CHAR(3)) FROM t1 ORDER BY CAST(a AS CHAR(2)), a;
# these two should be in alphabetic order
SELECT a, CAST(a AS UNSIGNED) FROM t1 ORDER BY CAST(a AS CHAR) ;
SELECT a, CAST(a AS CHAR(2)) FROM t1 ORDER BY CAST(a AS CHAR(3)), a;
DROP TABLE t1;
#
# Test for bug #6914 "Problems using time()/date() output in expressions".
# When we are casting datetime value to DATE/TIME we should throw away
# time/date parts (correspondingly).
#
select date_add(cast('2004-12-30 12:00:00' as date), interval 0 hour);
select timediff(cast('2004-12-30 12:00:00' as time), '12:00:00');
# Still we should not throw away "days" part of time value
select timediff(cast('1 12:00:00' as time), '12:00:00');
|