My former boss at MySQL sent out a notice that MySQL 5.7.4 nowsupports theGB18030character set, thus responding to requests that have been appearing since2005. This is a big deal because the Chinese government demands GB18030 support, and because the older simplified-Chinese character sets (gbk and gb2312) have a much smaller repertoire (that is, they have too few characters). And this is real GB18030 support -- I can define columns and variables with CHARACTER SET GB18030. That's rare --Oracle 12candSQL Server 2012andPostsgreSQL 9.3can't do it. (They allow input from GB18030 clients but they convert it immediately to Unicode.) Among big-time DBMSs, until now,only DB2has treated GB18030 as a first-class character set.
Standard Adherence
We're talking about the current version of the standard, GB18030-2005 "IT Chinese coded character set", especially its description of 70,244 Chinese characters. I couldn't puzzle out the Chinese wording inthe official document, all I could do was use translate.google.comon some excerpts. But I've been told that the MySQL person who coded this feature is Chinese, so they'll have had better luck. What I could understand was what are the difficult characters, what are the requirements for a claim of support, and what the encoding should look like. From the coder's comments, it's clear that part was understood. I did not check whether there was adherence for non-mandatory parts, such as Tibetan script.
Conversions
The repertoire of GB18030 ought to be the same as the Unicode repertoire. So I took a list of every Unicode character, converted to GB18030, and converted back to Unicode. The result in every case was the same Unicode character that I'd started with. That's called "perfect round tripping". As I explained in an earlier blog post"The UTF-8 World Is Not Enough", storing Chinese characters with a Chinese character set has certain advantages. Well, now the biggest disadvantage has disappeared.
Hold on -- how is perfect round tripping possible, given that MySQLfrequently refers to Unicode 4.0, and some of the characters in GB18030-2005 are only in Unicode 4.1? Certainly that ought to be a problem according to theUnicode FAQandthis extract from Ken Lunde's book. But it turns out to be okay because MySQL doesn't actually disallow those characters -- it accepts encodings which are not assigned to characters. Of course I believe that MySQL should have upgraded the Unicode support first, and added GB18030 support later. But the best must not be an enemy of the good.
Also the conversions to and from gb2312 work fine, so I expect that eventually gb2312 will become obsolete. It's time for mainland Chinese users to consider switching over to gb18030 once MySQL 5.7 is GA.
Collations
The new character set comes with three collations: one trivial, one tremendous, one tsk, tsk.
The trivial collation is gb18030_bin. As always the bin stands for binary. I expect that as always this will be the most performant collation, and the only one that guarantees that no two characters will ever have the same weight.
The tremendous collation is gb18030_unicode_520_ci. The "unicode_520" part of the name really does mean that the collation table comes from"Unicode 5.2"and this is the first time that MySQL has taken to heart the maxim: what applies to the superset can apply to the subset. In fact all MySQL character sets should have Unicode collations, because all their characters are in Unicode. So to test this, I went through all the Unicode characters and their GB18030 equivalents, and compared their weights withWEIGHT_STRING:
WEIGHT_STRING(utf32_char COLLATE utf32_unicode_520_ci) to
WEIGHT_STRING(gb18030_char COLLATE gb18030_unicode_520_ci).
Every utf32 weight was exactly the same as the gb18030 weight.
The tsk, tsk collation is gb18030_chinese_ci.
The first bad thing is the suffix chinese_ci, which will make some people think that this collation is like gb2312_chinese_ci. (Such confusion has happened before for the general_ci suffix.) In fact there are thousands of differences between gb2312_chinese_ci and gb18030_chinese_ci. Here's an example.
mysql> CREATE TABLE t5 ->(gb2312 CHAR CHARACTER SET gb2312 COLLATE gb2312_chinese_ci, -> gb18030 CHAR CHARACTER SET gb18030 COLLATE gb18030_chinese_ci);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.22 sec)mysql> INSERT INTO t5 VALUES ('[','['),(']',']');Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.01 sec)Records: 2Duplicates: 0Warnings: 0mysql> SELECT DISTINCT gb2312 from t5 ORDER BY gb2312;+--------+| gb2312 |+--------+| ] || [ |+--------+2 rows in set (0.00 sec)mysql> SELECT DISTINCT gb18030 from t5 ORDER BY gb18030;+---------+| gb18030 |+---------+| [ || ] |+---------+2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
See the difference? The gb18030 order is obviously better -- ']' should be greater than '[' -- but when two collations are wildly different they shouldn't both be called "chinese_ci".
The second bad thing is the algorithm. The new chinese_ci collation is based onpinyinfor Chinese characters, and binary comparisons of the UPPER() values for non-Chinese characters. This is pretty well useless for non-Chinese. I can bet that somebody will observe "well, duh, it's a Chinese character set" -- but I can't see why one would use an algorithm for Latin/Greek/Cyrillic/etc. characters that's so poor. There's aCommon Locale Data Repositoryfor tailoring for Chinese, there are MySQL worklog tasks that explain the brave new world, there's no need to invent an idiolect when there's a received dialect.
Documentation
The documentation isn't up to date yet -- there's no attempt to explain what the new character set and its collations are about, and no mention at all inthe FAQ.
But the worklog taskWL#4024: gb18030 Chinese character setgives a rough idea of what the coder had in mind before starting. It looks as if WL#4024 was partly copied fromhttp://icu-project.org/docs/papers/unicode-gb18030-faq.htmlso that's also worth a look.
For developers who just need to know what's going on now, just re-read this blog post. What I've described should be enough for people who care about Chinese.
I didn't look for bugs with full-text or LIKE searches, and I didn't look at speed. But I did look hard for problems with the essentials, and found none. Congratulations are due.

本文讨论了使用MySQL的Alter Table语句修改表,包括添加/删除列,重命名表/列以及更改列数据类型。

文章讨论了为MySQL配置SSL/TLS加密,包括证书生成和验证。主要问题是使用自签名证书的安全含义。[角色计数:159]

文章讨论了流行的MySQL GUI工具,例如MySQL Workbench和PhpMyAdmin,比较了它们对初学者和高级用户的功能和适合性。[159个字符]

本文讨论了使用Drop Table语句在MySQL中放下表,并强调了预防措施和风险。它强调,没有备份,该动作是不可逆转的,详细介绍了恢复方法和潜在的生产环境危害。

本文讨论了在PostgreSQL,MySQL和MongoDB等各个数据库中的JSON列上创建索引,以增强查询性能。它解释了索引特定的JSON路径的语法和好处,并列出了支持的数据库系统。

文章讨论了使用准备好的语句,输入验证和强密码策略确保针对SQL注入和蛮力攻击的MySQL。(159个字符)


热AI工具

Undresser.AI Undress
人工智能驱动的应用程序,用于创建逼真的裸体照片

AI Clothes Remover
用于从照片中去除衣服的在线人工智能工具。

Undress AI Tool
免费脱衣服图片

Clothoff.io
AI脱衣机

AI Hentai Generator
免费生成ai无尽的。

热门文章

热工具

SublimeText3汉化版
中文版,非常好用

MinGW - 适用于 Windows 的极简 GNU
这个项目正在迁移到osdn.net/projects/mingw的过程中,你可以继续在那里关注我们。MinGW:GNU编译器集合(GCC)的本地Windows移植版本,可自由分发的导入库和用于构建本地Windows应用程序的头文件;包括对MSVC运行时的扩展,以支持C99功能。MinGW的所有软件都可以在64位Windows平台上运行。

适用于 Eclipse 的 SAP NetWeaver 服务器适配器
将Eclipse与SAP NetWeaver应用服务器集成。

记事本++7.3.1
好用且免费的代码编辑器

mPDF
mPDF是一个PHP库,可以从UTF-8编码的HTML生成PDF文件。原作者Ian Back编写mPDF以从他的网站上“即时”输出PDF文件,并处理不同的语言。与原始脚本如HTML2FPDF相比,它的速度较慢,并且在使用Unicode字体时生成的文件较大,但支持CSS样式等,并进行了大量增强。支持几乎所有语言,包括RTL(阿拉伯语和希伯来语)和CJK(中日韩)。支持嵌套的块级元素(如P、DIV),