Certain words such as SELECT,
DELETE, or BIGINT are
reserved and require special treatment for use as identifiers such
as table and column names. This may also be true for the names of
built-in functions.
Reserved words are permitted as identifiers if you quote them as described in Section 9.2, “Database, Table, Index, Column, and Alias Names”:
mysql>CREATE TABLE interval (begin INT, end INT);ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax ... near 'interval (begin INT, end INT)' mysql>CREATE TABLE `interval` (begin INT, end INT);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
Exception: A word that follows a period in a qualified name must be an identifier, so it need not be quoted even if it is reserved:
mysql> CREATE TABLE mydb.interval (begin INT, end INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
Names of built-in functions are permitted as identifiers but may
require care to be used as such. For example,
COUNT is acceptable as a column name. However,
by default, no whitespace is allowed in function invocations
between the function name and the following
‘(’ character. This requirement
enables the parser to distinguish whether the name is used in a
function call or in non-function context. For further detail on
recognition of function names, see
Section 9.2.3, “Function Name Parsing and Resolution”.
The words in the following table are explicitly reserved in MySQL
5.0. At some point, you might upgrade to a higher
version, so it's a good idea to have a look at future reserved
words, too. You can find these in the manuals that cover higher
versions of MySQL. Most of the words in the table are forbidden by
standard SQL as column or table names (for example,
GROUP). A few are reserved because MySQL needs
them and uses a yacc parser. A reserved word
can be used as an identifier if you quote it.
ADD |
ALL |
ALTER |
ANALYZE |
AND |
AS |
ASC |
ASENSITIVE |
BEFORE |
BETWEEN |
BIGINT |
BINARY |
BLOB |
BOTH |
BY |
CALL |
CASCADE |
CASE |
CHANGE |
CHAR |
CHARACTER |
CHECK |
COLLATE |
COLUMN |
CONDITION |
CONSTRAINT |
CONTINUE |
CONVERT |
CREATE |
CROSS |
CURRENT_DATE |
CURRENT_TIME |
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP |
CURRENT_USER |
CURSOR |
DATABASE |
DATABASES |
DAY_HOUR |
DAY_MICROSECOND |
DAY_MINUTE |
DAY_SECOND |
DEC |
DECIMAL |
DECLARE |
DEFAULT |
DELAYED |
DELETE |
DESC |
DESCRIBE |
DETERMINISTIC |
DISTINCT |
DISTINCTROW |
DIV |
DOUBLE |
DROP |
DUAL |
EACH |
ELSE |
ELSEIF |
ENCLOSED |
ESCAPED |
EXISTS |
EXIT |
EXPLAIN |
FALSE |
FETCH |
FLOAT |
FLOAT4 |
FLOAT8 |
FOR |
FORCE |
FOREIGN |
FROM |
FULLTEXT |
GRANT |
GROUP |
HAVING |
HIGH_PRIORITY |
HOUR_MICROSECOND |
HOUR_MINUTE |
HOUR_SECOND |
IF |
IGNORE |
IN |
INDEX |
INFILE |
INNER |
INOUT |
INSENSITIVE |
INSERT |
INT |
INT1 |
INT2 |
INT3 |
INT4 |
INT8 |
INTEGER |
INTERVAL |
INTO |
IS |
ITERATE |
JOIN |
KEY |
KEYS |
KILL |
LEADING |
LEAVE |
LEFT |
LIKE |
LIMIT |
LINES |
LOAD |
LOCALTIME |
LOCALTIMESTAMP |
LOCK |
LONG |
LONGBLOB |
LONGTEXT |
LOOP |
LOW_PRIORITY |
MATCH |
MEDIUMBLOB |
MEDIUMINT |
MEDIUMTEXT |
MIDDLEINT |
MINUTE_MICROSECOND |
MINUTE_SECOND |
MOD |
MODIFIES |
NATURAL |
NOT |
NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG |
NULL |
NUMERIC |
ON |
OPTIMIZE |
OPTION |
OPTIONALLY |
OR |
ORDER |
OUT |
OUTER |
OUTFILE |
PRECISION |
PRIMARY |
PROCEDURE |
PURGE |
RAID0 |
READ |
READS |
REAL |
REFERENCES |
REGEXP |
RELEASE |
RENAME |
REPEAT |
REPLACE |
REQUIRE |
RESTRICT |
RETURN |
REVOKE |
RIGHT |
RLIKE |
SCHEMA |
SCHEMAS |
SECOND_MICROSECOND |
SELECT |
SENSITIVE |
SEPARATOR |
SET |
SHOW |
SMALLINT |
SONAME |
SPATIAL |
SPECIFIC |
SQL |
SQLEXCEPTION |
SQLSTATE |
SQLWARNING |
SQL_BIG_RESULT |
SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS |
SQL_SMALL_RESULT |
SSL |
STARTING |
STRAIGHT_JOIN |
TABLE |
TERMINATED |
THEN |
TINYBLOB |
TINYINT |
TINYTEXT |
TO |
TRAILING |
TRIGGER |
TRUE |
UNDO |
UNION |
UNIQUE |
UNLOCK |
UNSIGNED |
UPDATE |
USAGE |
USE |
USING |
UTC_DATE |
UTC_TIME |
UTC_TIMESTAMP |
VALUES |
VARBINARY |
VARCHAR |
VARCHARACTER |
VARYING |
WHEN |
WHERE |
WHILE |
WITH |
WRITE |
X509 |
XOR |
YEAR_MONTH |
ZEROFILL |
The following are new reserved words in MySQL 5.0:
ASENSITIVE |
CALL |
CONDITION |
CONTINUE |
CURSOR |
DECLARE |
DETERMINISTIC |
EACH |
ELSEIF |
EXIT |
FETCH |
INOUT |
INSENSITIVE |
ITERATE |
LEAVE |
LOOP |
MODIFIES |
OUT |
READS |
RELEASE |
REPEAT |
RETURN |
SCHEMA |
SCHEMAS |
SENSITIVE |
SPECIFIC |
SQL |
SQLEXCEPTION |
SQLSTATE |
SQLWARNING |
TRIGGER |
UNDO |
WHILE |
MySQL allows some keywords to be used as unquoted identifiers because many people previously used them. Examples are those in the following list:
ACTION
BIT
DATE
ENUM
NO
TEXT
TIME
TIMESTAMP

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