HELP 'search_string
'
The HELP
statement returns online
information from the MySQL Reference manual. Its proper operation
requires that the help tables in the mysql
database be initialized with help topic information (see
Section 5.1.9, “Server-Side Help”).
The HELP
statement searches the
help tables for the given search string and displays the result of
the search. The search string is not case sensitive.
The HELP statement understands several types of search strings:
At the most general level, use contents
to
retrieve a list of the top-level help categories:
HELP 'contents'
For a list of topics in a given help category, such as
Data Types
, use the category name:
HELP 'data types'
For help on a specific help topic, such as the
ASCII()
function or the
CREATE TABLE
statement, use the
associated keyword or keywords:
HELP 'ascii' HELP 'create table'
In other words, the search string matches a category, many topics,
or a single topic. You cannot necessarily tell in advance whether
a given search string will return a list of items or the help
information for a single help topic. However, you can tell what
kind of response HELP
returned by
examining the number of rows and columns in the result set.
The following descriptions indicate the forms that the result set
can take. Output for the example statements is shown using the
familiar “tabular” or “vertical” format
that you see when using the mysql client, but
note that mysql itself reformats
HELP
result sets in a different
way.
Empty result set
No match could be found for the search string.
Result set containing a single row with three columns
This means that the search string yielded a hit for the help topic. The result has three columns:
name
: The topic name.
description
: Descriptive help text for
the topic.
example
: Usage example or examples.
This column might be blank.
Example: HELP 'replace'
Yields:
name: REPLACE description: Syntax: REPLACE(str,from_str,to_str) Returns the string str with all occurrences of the string from_str replaced by the string to_str. REPLACE() performs a case-sensitive match when searching for from_str. example: mysql> SELECT REPLACE('www.mysql.com', 'w', 'Ww'); -> 'WwWwWw.mysql.com'
Result set containing multiple rows with two columns
This means that the search string matched many help topics. The result set indicates the help topic names:
name
: The help topic name.
is_it_category
: Y
if
the name represents a help category, N
if it does not. If it does not, the
name
value when specified as the
argument to the HELP
statement should yield a single-row result set containing
a description for the named item.
Example: HELP 'status'
Yields:
+-----------------------+----------------+ | name | is_it_category | +-----------------------+----------------+ | SHOW | N | | SHOW ENGINE | N | | SHOW INNODB STATUS | N | | SHOW MASTER STATUS | N | | SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS | N | | SHOW SLAVE STATUS | N | | SHOW STATUS | N | | SHOW TABLE STATUS | N | +-----------------------+----------------+
Result set containing multiple rows with three columns
This means the search string matches a category. The result set contains category entries:
source_category_name
: The help category
name.
name
: The category or topic name
is_it_category
: Y
if
the name represents a help category, N
if it does not. If it does not, the
name
value when specified as the
argument to the HELP
statement should yield a single-row result set containing
a description for the named item.
Example: HELP 'functions'
Yields:
+----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+ | source_category_name | name | is_it_category | +----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+ | Functions | CREATE FUNCTION | N | | Functions | DROP FUNCTION | N | | Functions | Bit Functions | Y | | Functions | Comparison operators | Y | | Functions | Control flow functions | Y | | Functions | Date and Time Functions | Y | | Functions | Encryption Functions | Y | | Functions | Information Functions | Y | | Functions | Logical operators | Y | | Functions | Miscellaneous Functions | Y | | Functions | Numeric Functions | Y | | Functions | String Functions | Y | +----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+
Before MySQL 5.1.17, if you intend to use the
HELP
statement while other tables
are locked with LOCK TABLES
, you
must also lock the required
mysql.help_
tables. See Section 12.3.5, “xxx
LOCK TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
Syntax”.
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