
- MySQL - Home
- MySQL - Introduction
- MySQL - Features
- MySQL - Versions
- MySQL - Variables
- MySQL - Installation
- MySQL - Administration
- MySQL - PHP Syntax
- MySQL - Node.js Syntax
- MySQL - Java Syntax
- MySQL - Python Syntax
- MySQL - Connection
- MySQL - Workbench
- MySQL Databases
- MySQL - Create Database
- MySQL - Drop Database
- MySQL - Select Database
- MySQL - Show Database
- MySQL - Copy Database
- MySQL - Database Export
- MySQL - Database Import
- MySQL - Database Info
- MySQL Users
- MySQL - Create Users
- MySQL - Drop Users
- MySQL - Show Users
- MySQL - Change Password
- MySQL - Grant Privileges
- MySQL - Show Privileges
- MySQL - Revoke Privileges
- MySQL - Lock User Account
- MySQL - Unlock User Account
- MySQL Tables
- MySQL - Create Tables
- MySQL - Show Tables
- MySQL - Alter Tables
- MySQL - Rename Tables
- MySQL - Clone Tables
- MySQL - Truncate Tables
- MySQL - Temporary Tables
- MySQL - Repair Tables
- MySQL - Describe Tables
- MySQL - Add/Delete Columns
- MySQL - Show Columns
- MySQL - Rename Columns
- MySQL - Table Locking
- MySQL - Drop Tables
- MySQL - Derived Tables
- MySQL Queries
- MySQL - Queries
- MySQL - Constraints
- MySQL - Insert Query
- MySQL - Select Query
- MySQL - Update Query
- MySQL - Delete Query
- MySQL - Replace Query
- MySQL - Insert Ignore
- MySQL - Insert on Duplicate Key Update
- MySQL - Insert Into Select
- MySQL Indexes
- MySQL - Indexes
- MySQL - Create Index
- MySQL - Drop Index
- MySQL - Show Indexes
- MySQL - Unique Index
- MySQL - Clustered Index
- MySQL - Non-Clustered Index
- MySQL Operators and Clauses
- MySQL - Where Clause
- MySQL - Limit Clause
- MySQL - Distinct Clause
- MySQL - Order By Clause
- MySQL - Group By Clause
- MySQL - Having Clause
- MySQL - AND Operator
- MySQL - OR Operator
- MySQL - Like Operator
- MySQL - IN Operator
- MySQL - ANY Operator
- MySQL - EXISTS Operator
- MySQL - NOT Operator
- MySQL - NOT EQUAL Operator
- MySQL - IS NULL Operator
- MySQL - IS NOT NULL Operator
- MySQL - Between Operator
- MySQL - UNION Operator
- MySQL - UNION vs UNION ALL
- MySQL - MINUS Operator
- MySQL - INTERSECT Operator
- MySQL - INTERVAL Operator
- MySQL Joins
- MySQL - Using Joins
- MySQL - Inner Join
- MySQL - Left Join
- MySQL - Right Join
- MySQL - Cross Join
- MySQL - Full Join
- MySQL - Self Join
- MySQL - Delete Join
- MySQL - Update Join
- MySQL - Union vs Join
- MySQL Keys
- MySQL - Unique Key
- MySQL - Primary Key
- MySQL - Foreign Key
- MySQL - Composite Key
- MySQL - Alternate Key
- MySQL Triggers
- MySQL - Triggers
- MySQL - Create Trigger
- MySQL - Show Trigger
- MySQL - Drop Trigger
- MySQL - Before Insert Trigger
- MySQL - After Insert Trigger
- MySQL - Before Update Trigger
- MySQL - After Update Trigger
- MySQL - Before Delete Trigger
- MySQL - After Delete Trigger
- MySQL Data Types
- MySQL - Data Types
- MySQL - VARCHAR
- MySQL - BOOLEAN
- MySQL - ENUM
- MySQL - DECIMAL
- MySQL - INT
- MySQL - FLOAT
- MySQL - BIT
- MySQL - TINYINT
- MySQL - BLOB
- MySQL - SET
- MySQL Regular Expressions
- MySQL - Regular Expressions
- MySQL - RLIKE Operator
- MySQL - NOT LIKE Operator
- MySQL - NOT REGEXP Operator
- MySQL - regexp_instr() Function
- MySQL - regexp_like() Function
- MySQL - regexp_replace() Function
- MySQL - regexp_substr() Function
- MySQL Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Natural Language Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Boolean Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Query Expansion Fulltext Search
- MySQL - ngram Fulltext Parser
- MySQL Functions & Operators
- MySQL - Date and Time Functions
- MySQL - Arithmetic Operators
- MySQL - Numeric Functions
- MySQL - String Functions
- MySQL - Aggregate Functions
- MySQL Misc Concepts
- MySQL - NULL Values
- MySQL - Transactions
- MySQL - Using Sequences
- MySQL - Handling Duplicates
- MySQL - SQL Injection
- MySQL - SubQuery
- MySQL - Comments
- MySQL - Check Constraints
- MySQL - Storage Engines
- MySQL - Export Table into CSV File
- MySQL - Import CSV File into Database
- MySQL - UUID
- MySQL - Common Table Expressions
- MySQL - On Delete Cascade
- MySQL - Upsert
- MySQL - Horizontal Partitioning
- MySQL - Vertical Partitioning
- MySQL - Cursor
- MySQL - Stored Functions
- MySQL - Signal
- MySQL - Resignal
- MySQL - Character Set
- MySQL - Collation
- MySQL - Wildcards
- MySQL - Alias
- MySQL - ROLLUP
- MySQL - Today Date
- MySQL - Literals
- MySQL - Stored Procedure
- MySQL - Explain
- MySQL - JSON
- MySQL - Standard Deviation
- MySQL - Find Duplicate Records
- MySQL - Delete Duplicate Records
- MySQL - Select Random Records
- MySQL - Show Processlist
- MySQL - Change Column Type
- MySQL - Reset Auto-Increment
- MySQL - Coalesce() Function
MySQL LEFT() Function
The MySQL LEFT() function accepts a string value and a numerical value (say N), and returns the specified string up to N characters from left to right.
This function is useful when you want to extract a certain number of characters from the left end of a string. It can be used in various scenarios such as extracting a file extension, area code or any other text string from the left end of the string.
Syntax
Following is the syntax of MySQL LEFT() function −
LEFT(str,len)
Parameters
This function takes a string and a specified number of characters as parameter.
Return Value
This function returns the leftmost portion of the string with the specified length.
Example
In the following example, we are extracting the first 5 characters from the left side of the string 'TUTORIALSPOINT' −
SELECT LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', 5);
Following is the output of the above code −
LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', 5) |
---|
TUTOR |
Example
If the second argument provided to this function is greater than the length of the given string, it returns the string without any changes −
SELECT LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', 20);
The output obtained is as follows −
LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', 20) |
---|
TUTORIALSPOINT |
Example
When the second argument is a negative value, the function returns an empty string −
SELECT LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', -4);
We get the output as follows −
LEFT('TUTORIALSPOINT', -4) |
---|
Example
If any of the arguments passed to this function is NULL, it returns NULL −
SELECT LEFT(NULL, 5);
The result produced is as shown below −
LEFT(NULL, 5) |
---|
0x |
Example
You can also pass numerical values to this function −
SELECT LEFT(763275825171, 6);
The result produced is as shown below −
LEFT(763275825171, 6) |
---|
763275 |
Example
You can also pass the name of a table column to this function and print the desired characters in it.
Let us create a table named "EMP" and insert records into it using CREATE and INSERT statements as shown below −
CREATE TABLE EMP( FIRST_NAME CHAR(20) NOT NULL, LAST_NAME CHAR(20), AGE INT, INCOME FLOAT );
Now, let us insert records into it using the INSERT statement −
INSERT INTO EMP VALUES ('Krishna', 'Sharma', 19, 2000), ('Raj', 'Kandukuri', 20, 7000), ('Ramya', 'Ramapriya', 25, 5000), ('Mac', 'Mohan', 26, 2000);
The EMP obtained is as follows −
FIRST_NAME | LAST_NAME | AGE | INCOME |
---|---|---|---|
Krishna | Sharma | 19 | 2000 |
Raj | Kandukuri | 20 | 7000 |
Ramya | Ramapriya | 25 | 5000 |
Mac | Mohan | 26 | 2000 |
Following query retrieves first 3 characters in the column 'FIRST_NAME' using the LEFT() function −
SELECT FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, AGE, LEFT(FIRST_NAME, 3) as RESULT FROM EMP;
After executing the above code, we get the following output −
FIRST_NAME | LAST_NAME | AGE | LEFT(FIRST_NAME, 3) |
---|---|---|---|
Krishna | Sharma | 19 | Kri |
Raj | Kandukuri | 20 | Raj |
Ramya | Ramapriya | 25 | Ram |
Mac | Mohan | 26 | Mac |