Integer Numbers
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Data Type |
Size |
Size (Not Null) |
Synonyms |
Min Value |
Max Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOL* (see note below) |
2 bytes |
1 byte |
BOOLEAN |
-128 |
127 |
BIT (used to store bit values; described in full here) |
9 bytes |
8 bytes |
|||
TINYINT |
2 bytes |
1 byte |
-128 |
127 |
|
SMALLINT |
4 bytes |
2 bytes |
-32768 |
32767 |
|
MEDIUMINT |
4 bytes |
3 bytes |
-8388608 |
8388607 |
|
INT |
8 bytes |
4 bytes |
INTEGER |
-2147483648 |
2147483647 |
BIGINT |
12 bytes |
8 bytes |
-2 ** 63 |
(2 ** 63) - 1 |
Remarks
BOOL
and BOOLEAN
are synonymous with TINYINT
.0
is considered FALSE
, non-zero values are considered TRUE
.
The format: INT(x)
(for example, INT(5)
) is used to specify display width and not the size of the integer.
An optional UNSIGNED
argument is allowed for INTEGER
data types.
CREATE TABLE test (uid INT UNSIGNED, id INT);INSERT INTO test SELECT 4294967295, 4294967295;INSERT INTO test SELECT -2, -2;SELECT * FROM test;
+------------+------------+
| uid | id |
+------------+------------+
| 4294967295 | 2147483647 |
| 0 | -2 |
+------------+------------+
CREATE TABLE test2 (uid TINYINT UNSIGNED, id TINYINT);INSERT INTO test2 SELECT 255, 255;INSERT INTO test2 SELECT -2, -2;SELECT * FROM test2;
+------+------+
| uid | id |
+------+------+
| 255 | 127 |
| 0 | -2 |
+------+------+
Last modified: June 6, 2023