In MySQL, a zero number equals any string

Updated . Posted . Visible to the public.

In MySQL comparing zero to a string 0 = "any string" is always true!

So when you want to compare a string with a value of an integer column, you have to cast your integer value into a string like follows:

SELECT * from posts WHERE CAST(posts.comments_count AS CHAR) = '200' 

Of course this is usually not what you want to use for selecting your data as this might cause some expensive database operations. No indexes can be used and a full table scan will always be triggered.

If possible, cast the compared value in your application to avoid rewriting all lines in the database. ActiveRecord does that automagically, for example.

PostgreSQL is not affected

PostgreSQL will throw an error when you compare an integer with a string without explicit casting.

In authentication, this behavior may be used to match rows without knowing a secret token:

Last edit
Henning Koch
Keywords
conversion, comparison
License
Source code in this card is licensed under the MIT License.
Posted to makandra dev (2012-02-21 15:14)