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MySQL Server supports three comment styles:
From a ‘#
’ character to the end of the line.
From a ‘--
’ sequence to the end of the line. In MySQL, the ‘--
’ (double-dash) comment style requires the second dash to be followed by at least one whitespace or control character (such as a space, tab, newline, and so on). This syntax differs slightly from standard SQL comment syntax, as discussed in Section 1.9.5.7, “'--
' as the Start of a Comment”.
From a /*
sequence to the following */
sequence, as in the C programming language. This syntax allows a comment to extend over multiple lines because the beginning and closing sequences need not be on the same line.
The following example demonstrates all three comment styles:
mysql>SELECT 1+1; # This comment continues to the end of line
mysql>SELECT 1+1; -- This comment continues to the end of line
mysql>SELECT 1 /* this is an in-line comment */ + 1;
mysql>SELECT 1+
/*
this is a
multiple-line comment
*/
1;
MySQL Server supports some variants of C-style comments. These enable you to write code that includes MySQL extensions, but is still portable, by using comments of the following form:
/*! MySQL-specific code
*/
In this case, MySQL Server parses and executes the code within the comment as it would any other SQL statement, but other SQL servers will ignore the extensions. For example, MySQL Server recognizes the STRAIGHT_JOIN
keyword in the following statement, but other servers will not:
SELECT /*! STRAIGHT_JOIN */ col1 FROM table1,table2 WHERE ...
If you add a version number after the ‘!
’ character, the syntax within the comment is executed only if the MySQL version is greater than or equal to the specified version number. The TEMPORARY
keyword in the following comment is executed only by servers from MySQL 3.23.02 or higher:
CREATE /*!32302 TEMPORARY */ TABLE t (a INT);
The comment syntax just described applies to how the mysqld server parses SQL statements. The mysql client program also performs some parsing of statements before sending them to the server. (It does this to determine statement boundaries within a multiple-statement input line.)