I feel like to comment here on "because it can't use indexes for such things". This is not a serious reply IMO. It is just another way or saying "Please shut up!" How many existing string functions ( http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/string-functions.html) use an index? Does "select concat('a','b');" do for instance? I cannot think of any. And why do we have 'stored programs' if a database server should only do things that uses indexes? Does a WHILE-loop inside a stroed program use an index? Unlike most other RDBMS, MySQL has a tradition to do things in the application thet other RDBMS would do in the database. But that traditions is/was because of lack of functionality in the server before 5.0 (what is still the case in some respects. Try compare a MySQL TRIGGER with an Oracle or SQL Server same, for instance). That said: this functionality can be implemented in a stored function using existing string functions (or in the application, as sugggested) quite easily. It is not possible (or desirable) to add build-in functions for everything. And I have no clue is such string function exists in other RDBMS. -- Peter -- Webyog On Wed, Mar 19, 2014 at 4:03 PM, Reindl Harald <h.reindl@thelounge.net>wrote:
Am 19.03.2014 15:51, schrieb Roberto Spadim:
hi guys, i'm not finding a function to return how many character i have, for example:
"banana"
i want a function that return 2 "n" characters, example: substr_count("banana","n") => 2
sorry it a begginners question, but i didn't found it in mysql/mariadb manual
that is not the job of the database server because it can't use indexes for such things - just iterate the result and do it in the application
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