Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 43.3Mb
PDF (A4) - 43.4Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 296.6Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 401.9Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.3Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.3Mb
Excerpts from this Manual

MySQL 8.0 Reference Manual  /  MySQL 8.0 Frequently Asked Questions  /  MySQL 8.0 FAQ: MySQL Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Character Sets

A.11 MySQL 8.0 FAQ: MySQL Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Character Sets

This set of Frequently Asked Questions derives from the experience of MySQL's Support and Development groups in handling many inquiries about CJK (Chinese-Japanese-Korean) issues.

A.11.1. What CJK character sets are available in MySQL?
A.11.2. I have inserted CJK characters into my table. Why does SELECT display them as “?” characters?
A.11.3. What problems should I be aware of when working with the Big5 Chinese character set?
A.11.4. Why do Japanese character set conversions fail?
A.11.5. What should I do if I want to convert SJIS 81CA to cp932?
A.11.6. How does MySQL represent the Yen (¥) sign?
A.11.7. Of what issues should I be aware when working with Korean character sets in MySQL?
A.11.8. Why do I get Incorrect string value error messages?
A.11.9. Why does my GUI front end or browser display CJK characters incorrectly in my application using Access, PHP, or another API?
A.11.10. I've upgraded to MySQL 8.0. How can I revert to behavior like that in MySQL 4.0 with regard to character sets?
A.11.11. Why do some LIKE and FULLTEXT searches with CJK characters fail?
A.11.12. How do I know whether character X is available in all character sets?
A.11.13. Why do CJK strings sort incorrectly in Unicode? (I)
A.11.14. Why do CJK strings sort incorrectly in Unicode? (II)
A.11.15. Why are my supplementary characters rejected by MySQL?
A.11.16. Should “CJK” be “CJKV”?
A.11.17. Does MySQL permit CJK characters to be used in database and table names?
A.11.18. Where can I find translations of the MySQL Manual into Chinese, Japanese, and Korean?
A.11.19. Where can I get help with CJK and related issues in MySQL?

A.11.1.

What CJK character sets are available in MySQL?

The list of CJK character sets may vary depending on your MySQL version. For example, the gb18030 character set is not supported prior to MySQL 5.7.4. However, since the name of the applicable language appears in the DESCRIPTION column for every entry in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CHARACTER_SETS table, you can obtain a current list of all the non-Unicode CJK character sets using this query:

mysql> SELECT CHARACTER_SET_NAME, DESCRIPTION
       FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CHARACTER_SETS
       WHERE DESCRIPTION LIKE '%Chin%'
       OR DESCRIPTION LIKE '%Japanese%'
       OR DESCRIPTION LIKE '%Korean%'
       ORDER BY CHARACTER_SET_NAME;
+--------------------+---------------------------------+
| CHARACTER_SET_NAME | DESCRIPTION                     |
+--------------------+---------------------------------+
| big5               | Big5 Traditional Chinese        |
| cp932              | SJIS for Windows Japanese       |
| eucjpms            | UJIS for Windows Japanese       |
| euckr              | EUC-KR Korean                   |
| gb18030            | China National Standard GB18030 |
| gb2312             | GB2312 Simplified Chinese       |
| gbk                | GBK Simplified Chinese          |
| sjis               | Shift-JIS Japanese              |
| ujis               | EUC-JP Japanese                 |
+--------------------+---------------------------------+

(For more information, see Section 28.3.4, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA CHARACTER_SETS Table”.)

MySQL supports three variants of the GB (Guojia Biaozhun, or National Standard, or Simplified Chinese) character sets which are official in the People's Republic of China: gb2312, gbk, and (as of MySQL 5.7.4) gb18030.

Sometimes people try to insert gbk characters into gb2312, and it works most of the time because gbk is a superset of gb2312. But eventually they try to insert a rarer Chinese character and it does not work. (For an example, see Bug #16072).

Here, we try to clarify exactly what characters are legitimate in gb2312 or gbk, with reference to the official documents. Please check these references before reporting gb2312 or gbk bugs:

It is also possible to store CJK characters in Unicode character sets, although the available collations may not sort characters quite as you expect:

  • The utf8 and ucs2 character sets support the characters from Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP). These characters have code point values between U+0000 and U+FFFF.

  • The utf8mb4, utf16, utf16le, and utf32 character sets support BMP characters, as well as supplementary characters that lie outside the BMP. Supplementary characters have code point values between U+10000 and U+10FFFF.

The collation used for a Unicode character set determines the ability to sort (that is, distinguish) characters in the set:

  • Collations based on Unicode Collation Algorithm (UCA) 4.0.0 distinguish only BMP characters.

  • Collations based on UCA 5.2.0 or 9.0.0 distinguish BMP and supplementary characters.

  • Non-UCA collations may not distinguish all Unicode characters. For example, the utf8mb4 default collation is utf8mb4_general_ci, which distinguishes only BMP characters.

Moreover, distinguishing characters is not the same as ordering them per the conventions of a given CJK language. Currently, MySQL has only one CJK-specific UCA collation, gb18030_unicode_520_ci (which requires use of the non-Unicode gb18030 character set).

For information about Unicode collations and their differentiating properties, including collation properties for supplementary characters, see Section 12.10.1, “Unicode Character Sets”.

A.11.2.

I have inserted CJK characters into my table. Why does SELECT display them as ? characters?

This problem is usually due to a setting in MySQL that does not match the settings for the application program or the operating system. Here are some common steps for correcting these types of issues:

  • Be certain of what MySQL version you are using.

    Use the statement SELECT VERSION(); to determine this.

  • Make sure that the database is actually using the desired character set.

    People often think that the client character set is always the same as either the server character set or the character set used for display purposes. However, both of these are false assumptions. You can make sure by checking the result of SHOW CREATE TABLE tablename or, better yet, by using this statement:

    SELECT character_set_name, collation_name
        FROM information_schema.columns
        WHERE table_schema = your_database_name
            AND table_name = your_table_name
            AND column_name = your_column_name;
  • Determine the hexadecimal value of the character or characters that are not being displayed correctly.

    You can obtain this information for a column column_name in the table table_name using the following query:

    SELECT HEX(column_name)
    FROM table_name;

    3F is the encoding for the ? character; this means that ? is the character actually stored in the column. This most often happens because of a problem converting a particular character from your client character set to the target character set.

  • Make sure that a round trip is possible. When you select literal (or _introducer hexadecimal-value), do you obtain literal as a result?

    For example, the Japanese Katakana character Pe (ペ') exists in all CJK character sets, and has the code point value (hexadecimal coding) 0x30da. To test a round trip for this character, use this query:

    SELECT 'ペ' AS `ペ`;         /* or SELECT _ucs2 0x30da; */

    If the result is not also , the round trip failed.

    For bug reports regarding such failures, we might ask you to follow up with SELECT HEX('ペ');. Then we can determine whether the client encoding is correct.

  • Make sure that the problem is not with the browser or other application, rather than with MySQL.

    Use the mysql client program to accomplish this task. If mysql displays characters correctly but your application does not, your problem is probably due to system settings.

    To determine your settings, use the SHOW VARIABLES statement, whose output should resemble what is shown here:

    mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'char%';
    +--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
    | Variable_name            | Value                                  |
    +--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
    | character_set_client     | utf8                                   |
    | character_set_connection | utf8                                   |
    | character_set_database   | latin1                                 |
    | character_set_filesystem | binary                                 |
    | character_set_results    | utf8                                   |
    | character_set_server     | latin1                                 |
    | character_set_system     | utf8                                   |
    | character_sets_dir       | /usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/charsets/ |
    +--------------------------+----------------------------------------+

    These are typical character-set settings for an international-oriented client (notice the use of utf8 Unicode) connected to a server in the West (latin1 is a West Europe character set).

    Although Unicode (usually the utf8 variant on Unix, and the ucs2 variant on Windows) is preferable to Latin, it is often not what your operating system utilities support best. Many Windows users find that a Microsoft character set, such as cp932 for Japanese Windows, is suitable.

    If you cannot control the server settings, and you have no idea what setting your underlying computer uses, try changing to a common character set for the country that you're in (euckr = Korea; gb18030, gb2312 or gbk = People's Republic of China; big5 = Taiwan; sjis, ujis, cp932, or eucjpms = Japan; ucs2 or utf8 = anywhere). Usually it is necessary to change only the client and connection and results settings. The SET NAMES. statement changes all three at once. For example:

    SET NAMES 'big5';

    Once the setting is correct, you can make it permanent by editing my.cnf or my.ini. For example you might add lines looking like these:

    [mysqld]
    character-set-server=big5
    [client]
    default-character-set=big5

    It is also possible that there are issues with the API configuration setting being used in your application; see Why does my GUI front end or browser not display CJK characters correctly...? for more information.

A.11.3.

What problems should I be aware of when working with the Big5 Chinese character set?

MySQL supports the Big5 character set which is common in Hong Kong and Taiwan (Republic of China). The MySQL big5 character set is in reality Microsoft code page 950, which is very similar to the original big5 character set.

A feature request for adding HKSCS extensions has been filed. People who need this extension may find the suggested patch for Bug #13577 to be of interest.

A.11.4.

Why do Japanese character set conversions fail?

MySQL supports the sjis, ujis, cp932, and eucjpms character sets, as well as Unicode. A common need is to convert between character sets. For example, there might be a Unix server (typically with sjis or ujis) and a Windows client (typically with cp932).

In the following conversion table, the ucs2 column represents the source, and the sjis, cp932, ujis, and eucjpms columns represent the destinations; that is, the last 4 columns provide the hexadecimal result when we use CONVERT(ucs2) or we assign a ucs2 column containing the value to an sjis, cp932, ujis, or eucjpms column.

Character Name ucs2 sjis cp932 ujis eucjpms
BROKEN BAR 00A6 3F 3F 8FA2C3 3F
FULLWIDTH BROKEN BAR FFE4 3F FA55 3F 8FA2
YEN SIGN 00A5 3F 3F 20 3F
FULLWIDTH YEN SIGN FFE5 818F 818F A1EF 3F
TILDE 007E 7E 7E 7E 7E
OVERLINE 203E 3F 3F 20 3F
HORIZONTAL BAR 2015 815C 815C A1BD A1BD
EM DASH 2014 3F 3F 3F 3F
REVERSE SOLIDUS 005C 815F 5C 5C 5C
FULLWIDTH REVERSE SOLIDUS FF3C 3F 815F 3F A1C0
WAVE DASH 301C 8160 3F A1C1 3F
FULLWIDTH TILDE FF5E 3F 8160 3F A1C1
DOUBLE VERTICAL LINE 2016 8161 3F A1C2 3F
PARALLEL TO 2225 3F 8161 3F A1C2
MINUS SIGN 2212 817C 3F A1DD 3F
FULLWIDTH HYPHEN-MINUS FF0D 3F 817C 3F A1DD
CENT SIGN 00A2 8191 3F A1F1 3F
FULLWIDTH CENT SIGN FFE0 3F 8191 3F A1F1
POUND SIGN 00A3 8192 3F A1F2 3F
FULLWIDTH POUND SIGN FFE1 3F 8192 3F A1F2
NOT SIGN 00AC 81CA 3F A2CC 3F
FULLWIDTH NOT SIGN FFE2 3F 81CA 3F A2CC

Now consider the following portion of the table.

ucs2 sjis cp932
NOT SIGN 00AC 81CA 3F
FULLWIDTH NOT SIGN FFE2 3F 81CA

This means that MySQL converts the NOT SIGN (Unicode U+00AC) to sjis code point 0x81CA and to cp932 code point 3F. (3F is the question mark (?. This is what is always used when the conversion cannot be performed.)

A.11.5.

What should I do if I want to convert SJIS 81CA to cp932?

Our answer is: ?. There are disadvantages to this, and many people would prefer a loose conversion, so that 81CA (NOT SIGN) in sjis becomes 81CA (FULLWIDTH NOT SIGN) in cp932.

A.11.6.

How does MySQL represent the Yen (¥) sign?

A problem arises because some versions of Japanese character sets (both sjis and euc) treat 5C as a reverse solidus (\, also known as a backslash), whereas others treat it as a yen sign (¥).

MySQL follows only one version of the JIS (Japanese Industrial Standards) standard description. In MySQL, 5C is always the reverse solidus (\).

A.11.7.

Of what issues should I be aware when working with Korean character sets in MySQL?

In theory, while there have been several versions of the euckr (Extended Unix Code Korea) character set, only one problem has been noted. We use the ASCII variant of EUC-KR, in which the code point 0x5c is REVERSE SOLIDUS, that is \, instead of the KS-Roman variant of EUC-KR, in which the code point 0x5c is WON SIGN (). This means that you cannot convert Unicode U+20A9 to euckr:

mysql> SELECT
           CONVERT('₩' USING euckr) AS euckr,
           HEX(CONVERT('₩' USING euckr)) AS hexeuckr;
+-------+----------+
| euckr | hexeuckr |
+-------+----------+
| ?     | 3F       |
+-------+----------+

A.11.8.

Why do I get Incorrect string value error messages?

To see the problem, create a table with one Unicode (ucs2) column and one Chinese (gb2312) column.

mysql> CREATE TABLE ch
       (ucs2 CHAR(3) CHARACTER SET ucs2,
       gb2312 CHAR(3) CHARACTER SET gb2312);

In nonstrict SQL mode, try to place the rare character in both columns.

mysql> SET sql_mode = '';
mysql> INSERT INTO ch VALUES ('A汌B','A汌B');
Query OK, 1 row affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec)

The INSERT produces a warning. Use the following statement to see what it is:

mysql> SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
  Level: Warning
   Code: 1366
Message: Incorrect string value: '\xE6\xB1\x8CB' for column 'gb2312' at row 1

So it is a warning about the gb2312 column only.

mysql> SELECT ucs2,HEX(ucs2),gb2312,HEX(gb2312) FROM ch;
+-------+--------------+--------+-------------+
| ucs2  | HEX(ucs2)    | gb2312 | HEX(gb2312) |
+-------+--------------+--------+-------------+
| A汌B | 00416C4C0042 | A?B    | 413F42      |
+-------+--------------+--------+-------------+

Several things need explanation here:

  1. The character is not in the gb2312 character set, as described earlier.

  2. If you are using an old version of MySQL, you may see a different message.

  3. A warning occurs rather than an error because MySQL is not set to use strict SQL mode. In nonstrict mode, MySQL tries to do what it can, to get the best fit, rather than give up. With strict SQL mode, the Incorrect string value message occurs as an error rather than a warning, and the INSERT fails.

A.11.9.

Why does my GUI front end or browser display CJK characters incorrectly in my application using Access, PHP, or another API?

Obtain a direct connection to the server using the mysql client, and try the same query there. If mysql responds correctly, the trouble may be that your application interface requires initialization. Use mysql to tell you what character set or sets it uses with the statement SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'char%';. If you are using Access, you are most likely connecting with Connector/ODBC. In this case, you should check Configuring Connector/ODBC. If, for example, you use big5, you would enter SET NAMES 'big5'. (In this case, no ; character is required.) If you are using ASP, you might need to add SET NAMES in the code. Here is an example that has worked in the past:

<%
Session.CodePage=0
Dim strConnection
Dim Conn
strConnection="driver={MySQL ODBC 3.51 Driver};server=server;uid=username;" \
               & "pwd=password;database=database;stmt=SET NAMES 'big5';"
Set Conn = Server.CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
Conn.Open strConnection
%>

In much the same way, if you are using any character set other than latin1 with Connector/NET, you must specify the character set in the connection string. See Connector/NET Connections, for more information.

If you are using PHP, try this:

<?php
  $link = new mysqli($host, $usr, $pwd, $db);

  if( mysqli_connect_errno() )
  {
    printf("Connect failed: %s\n", mysqli_connect_error());
    exit();
  }

  $link->query("SET NAMES 'utf8'");
?>

In this case, we used SET NAMES to change character_set_client, character_set_connection, and character_set_results.

Another issue often encountered in PHP applications has to do with assumptions made by the browser. Sometimes adding or changing a <meta> tag suffices to correct the problem: for example, to insure that the user agent interprets page content as UTF-8, include <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> in the <head> section of the HTML page.

If you are using Connector/J, see Using Character Sets and Unicode.

A.11.10.

I've upgraded to MySQL 8.0. How can I revert to behavior like that in MySQL 4.0 with regard to character sets?

In MySQL Version 4.0, there was a single global character set for both server and client, and the decision as to which character to use was made by the server administrator. This changed starting with MySQL Version 4.1. What happens now is a handshake, as described in Section 12.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”:

When a client connects, it sends to the server the name of the character set that it wants to use. The server uses the name to set the character_set_client, character_set_results, and character_set_connection system variables. In effect, the server performs a SET NAMES operation using the character set name.

The effect of this is that you cannot control the client character set by starting mysqld with --character-set-server=utf8. However, some Asian customers prefer the MySQL 4.0 behavior. To make it possible to retain this behavior, we added a mysqld switch, --character-set-client-handshake, which can be turned off with --skip-character-set-client-handshake. If you start mysqld with --skip-character-set-client-handshake, then, when a client connects, it sends to the server the name of the character set that it wants to use. However, the server ignores this request from the client.

By way of example, suppose that your favorite server character set is latin1. Suppose further that the client uses utf8 because this is what the client's operating system supports. Start the server with latin1 as its default character set:

mysqld --character-set-server=latin1

And then start the client with the default character set utf8:

mysql --default-character-set=utf8

The resulting settings can be seen by viewing the output of SHOW VARIABLES:

mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'char%';
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| Variable_name            | Value                                  |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| character_set_client     | utf8                                   |
| character_set_connection | utf8                                   |
| character_set_database   | latin1                                 |
| character_set_filesystem | binary                                 |
| character_set_results    | utf8                                   |
| character_set_server     | latin1                                 |
| character_set_system     | utf8                                   |
| character_sets_dir       | /usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/charsets/ |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+

Now stop the client, and stop the server using mysqladmin. Then start the server again, but this time tell it to skip the handshake like so:

mysqld --character-set-server=utf8 --skip-character-set-client-handshake

Start the client with utf8 once again as the default character set, then display the resulting settings:

mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'char%';
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| Variable_name            | Value                                  |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| character_set_client     | latin1                                 |
| character_set_connection | latin1                                 |
| character_set_database   | latin1                                 |
| character_set_filesystem | binary                                 |
| character_set_results    | latin1                                 |
| character_set_server     | latin1                                 |
| character_set_system     | utf8                                   |
| character_sets_dir       | /usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/charsets/ |
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------+

As you can see by comparing the differing results from SHOW VARIABLES, the server ignores the client's initial settings if the --skip-character-set-client-handshake option is used.

A.11.11.

Why do some LIKE and FULLTEXT searches with CJK characters fail?

For LIKE searches, there is a very simple problem with binary string column types such as BINARY and BLOB: we must know where characters end. With multibyte character sets, different characters might have different octet lengths. For example, in utf8, A requires one byte but requires three bytes, as shown here:

+-------------------------+---------------------------+
| OCTET_LENGTH(_utf8 'A') | OCTET_LENGTH(_utf8 'ペ') |
+-------------------------+---------------------------+
|                       1 |                         3 |
+-------------------------+---------------------------+

If we do not know where the first character in a string ends, we do not know where the second character begins, in which case even very simple searches such as LIKE '_A%' fail. The solution is to use a nonbinary string column type defined to have the proper CJK character set. For example: mycol TEXT CHARACTER SET sjis. Alternatively, convert to a CJK character set before comparing.

This is one reason why MySQL cannot permit encodings of nonexistent characters. If it is not strict about rejecting bad input, it has no way of knowing where characters end.

For FULLTEXT searches, we must know where words begin and end. With Western languages, this is rarely a problem because most (if not all) of these use an easy-to-identify word boundary: the space character. However, this is not usually the case with Asian writing. We could use arbitrary halfway measures, like assuming that all Han characters represent words, or (for Japanese) depending on changes from Katakana to Hiragana due to grammatical endings. However, the only sure solution requires a comprehensive word list, which means that we would have to include a dictionary in the server for each Asian language supported. This is simply not feasible.

A.11.12.

How do I know whether character X is available in all character sets?

The majority of simplified Chinese and basic nonhalfwidth Japanese Kana characters appear in all CJK character sets. The following stored procedure accepts a UCS-2 Unicode character, converts it to other character sets, and displays the results in hexadecimal.

DELIMITER //

CREATE PROCEDURE p_convert(ucs2_char CHAR(1) CHARACTER SET ucs2)
BEGIN

CREATE TABLE tj
             (ucs2 CHAR(1) character set ucs2,
              utf8 CHAR(1) character set utf8,
              big5 CHAR(1) character set big5,
              cp932 CHAR(1) character set cp932,
              eucjpms CHAR(1) character set eucjpms,
              euckr CHAR(1) character set euckr,
              gb2312 CHAR(1) character set gb2312,
              gbk CHAR(1) character set gbk,
              sjis CHAR(1) character set sjis,
              ujis CHAR(1) character set ujis);

INSERT INTO tj (ucs2) VALUES (ucs2_char);

UPDATE tj SET utf8=ucs2,
              big5=ucs2,
              cp932=ucs2,
              eucjpms=ucs2,
              euckr=ucs2,
              gb2312=ucs2,
              gbk=ucs2,
              sjis=ucs2,
              ujis=ucs2;

/* If there are conversion problems, UPDATE produces warnings. */

SELECT hex(ucs2) AS ucs2,
       hex(utf8) AS utf8,
       hex(big5) AS big5,
       hex(cp932) AS cp932,
       hex(eucjpms) AS eucjpms,
       hex(euckr) AS euckr,
       hex(gb2312) AS gb2312,
       hex(gbk) AS gbk,
       hex(sjis) AS sjis,
       hex(ujis) AS ujis
FROM tj;

DROP TABLE tj;

END//

DELIMITER ;

The input can be any single ucs2 character, or it can be the code value (hexadecimal representation) of that character. For example, from Unicode's list of ucs2 encodings and names (http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/UnicodeData.txt), we know that the Katakana character Pe appears in all CJK character sets, and that its code value is X'30DA'. If we use this value as the argument to p_convert(), the result is as shown here:

mysql> CALL p_convert(X'30DA');
+------+--------+------+-------+---------+-------+--------+------+------+------+
| ucs2 | utf8   | big5 | cp932 | eucjpms | euckr | gb2312 | gbk  | sjis | ujis |
+------+--------+------+-------+---------+-------+--------+------+------+------+
| 30DA | E3839A | C772 | 8379  | A5DA    | ABDA  | A5DA   | A5DA | 8379 | A5DA |
+------+--------+------+-------+---------+-------+--------+------+------+------+

Since none of the column values is 3F (that is, the question mark character, ?), we know that every conversion worked.

A.11.13.

Why do CJK strings sort incorrectly in Unicode? (I)

CJK sorting problems that occurred in older MySQL versions can be solved as of MySQL 8.0 by using the utf8mb4 character set and the utf8mb4_ja_0900_as_cs collation.

A.11.14.

Why do CJK strings sort incorrectly in Unicode? (II)

CJK sorting problems that occurred in older MySQL versions can be solved as of MySQL 8.0 by using the utf8mb4 character set and the utf8mb4_ja_0900_as_cs collation.

A.11.15.

Why are my supplementary characters rejected by MySQL?

Supplementary characters lie outside the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane / Plane 0. BMP characters have code point values between U+0000 and U+FFFF. Supplementary characters have code point values between U+10000 and U+10FFFF.

To store supplementary characters, you must use a character set that permits them:

  • The utf8 and ucs2 character sets support BMP characters only.

    The utf8 character set permits only UTF-8 characters that take up to three bytes. This has led to reports such as that found in Bug #12600, which we rejected as not a bug. With utf8, MySQL must truncate an input string when it encounters bytes that it does no understand. Otherwise, it is unknown how long the bad multibyte character is.

    One possible workaround is to use ucs2 instead of utf8, in which case the bad characters are changed to question marks. However, no truncation takes place. You can also change the data type to BLOB or BINARY, which perform no validity checking.

  • The utf8mb4, utf16, utf16le, and utf32 character sets support BMP characters, as well as supplementary characters outside the BMP.

A.11.16.

Should CJK be CJKV?

No. The term CJKV (Chinese Japanese Korean Vietnamese) refers to Vietnamese character sets which contain Han (originally Chinese) characters. MySQL supports the modern Vietnamese script with Western characters, but does not support the old Vietnamese script using Han characters.

As of MySQL 5.6, there are Vietnamese collations for Unicode character sets, as described in Section 12.10.1, “Unicode Character Sets”.

A.11.17.

Does MySQL permit CJK characters to be used in database and table names?

Yes.

A.11.18.

Where can I find translations of the MySQL Manual into Chinese, Japanese, and Korean?

The Japanese translation of the MySQL 5.6 manual can be downloaded from https://dev.mysql.com/doc/.

A.11.19.

Where can I get help with CJK and related issues in MySQL?

The following resources are available: