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MySQL - SET Syntax for Variable Assignment
MySQL SET Statement
The SET statement in MySQL is used to assign values for variables. Using this you can set values to, user-defined variables, variables in procedures and, system variables.
Syntax
Following is the syntax of the SET statement in MySQL−
SET variable = val1, val2, val3, . . . variable: { user_var_name | param_name | local_var_name | {GLOBAL | @@GLOBAL.} system_var_name | {PERSIST | @@PERSIST.} system_var_name | {PERSIST_ONLY | @@PERSIST_ONLY.} system_var_name | [SESSION | @@SESSION. | @@] system_var_name }
Setting values to user defined variables
You can create variables with in the current MySQL session and use them in the queries. While defining a user d-fined variable you need to place '@' before the variable name.
Example
SET @name = 'Krishna'; SET @age = 25; SET @phone = 9012345678;
You can retrieve the values of these variables using the SELECT statement as −
SELECT @name, @age, @phone;
Output
The above query produces the following output −
@name | @age | @phone |
---|---|---|
Krishna | 25 | 9012345678 |
Setting values to local variables
You can define variables with in stored routines and set values to them using the SET statement.
Example
Following is an example of declaring local variables −
DELIMITER // CREATE PROCEDURE RepeatExample() BEGIN DECLARE val INT; DECLARE squares INT; DECLARE res VARCHAR(100); SET val=1; SET squares=1; SET res = ''; REPEAT SET squares = val*val; SET res = CONCAT(res, squares,','); SET val = val + 1; UNTIL val >= 10 END REPEAT; SELECT res; END// DELIMITER ;
You can call the above procedure as follows −
CALL RepeatExample;
Output
Following is the output of the above query −
res |
---|
1,4,9,16,25,36,49,64,81, |
Setting values to system variables
MySQL system variables holds global or session level values, these variables are used to configure various operations. You can set values to these variables dynamically using the SET statement
Example
Let us verify whether loading local data is enabled, if not you can observe the local_infile variable value as −
SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'local_infile';
Output
The above mysql query generates the following output −
Variable_name | Value |
---|---|
local_infile | OFF |
Following query enables local_infile option as −
SET GLOBAL local_infile = 'ON';
If you verify the value of the variable local_infile again, you can observe the changed value as −
SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'local_infile';
Output
Following is the output of the above mysql query −
Variable_name | value |
---|---|
local_infile | ON |