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MySQL REPLACE() Function
The MySQL REPLACE() function is used to replace all occurrences of a specific substring in a given string with another specified substring.
This function accepts three parameters: the original string, the substring to be replaced, and the substring to replace it with. It can be used in a variety of scenarios such as replacing a particular word in a sentence or updating values in a database.
Syntax
Following is the syntax of MySQL REPLACE() function −
REPLACE(str,from_str,to_str)
Parameters
This function takes a string, a search string, and a replacement string as parameter.
Return Value
This function returns a new string with all occurrences of the search string replaced by the replacement string.
Example
In the following example, we are replacing the occurrence of 'Hello' with 'Hi' in the given string −
SELECT REPLACE('Hello how are you', 'Hello', 'Hi');
Following is the output of the above code −
REPLACE('Hello how are you', 'Hello', 'Hi') |
---|
Hi how are you |
Example
If any of the arguments passed to the function is NULL, it returns NULL −
SELECT REPLACE('Hello how are you', 'Hello', NULL);
The output obtained is as follows −
REPLACE('Hello how are you', 'Hello', NULL) |
---|
NULL |
Example
You can also pass numerical values as the first argument to this function −
SELECT REPLACE(4125412387981236985123, 123, 000);
We get the output as follows −
REPLACE(4125412387981236985123, 123, 000) |
---|
4125408798069850 |
Example
While replacing this function performs a case-sensitive match. If you try to replace the substring by changing the case, this function generates an error −
SELECT REPLACE('Hello how are you', HOW, 'Hi');
Following is the output of the above code −
ERROR 1054 (42S22): Unknown column 'HOW' in 'field list'
Example
You can also pass column name of a table as an argument to this function and replace the part of the values 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 replaces the string "Krishna" in the entities of the column "FIRST_NAME" with '$$$$$$$' using the REPLACE() function −
SELECT FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, AGE, REPLACE(FIRST_NAME, 'Krishna', '$$$$$$$') as Result FROM EMP;
Output
After executing the above code, we get the following output −
FIRST_NAME | LAST_NAME | AGE | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Krishna | Sharma | 19 | $$$$$$$ Sharma |
Raj | Kandukuri | 20 | Raj Kandukuri |
Ramya | Ramapriya | 25 | Ramya Ramapriya |
Mac | Mohan | 26 | Mac Mohan |