MySQL 5.1 supports built-in (native) functions, user-defined functions (UDFs), and stored functions. This section describes how the server recognizes whether the name of a built-in function is used as a function call or as an identifier, and how the server determines which function to use in cases when functions of different types exist with a given name.
Built-In Function Name Parsing
        The parser uses default rules for parsing names of built-in
        functions. These rules can be changed by enabling the
        IGNORE_SPACE SQL mode.
      
        When the parser encounters a word that is the name of a built-in
        function, it must determine whether the name signifies a
        function call or is instead a nonexpression reference to an
        identifier such as a table or column name. For example, in the
        following statements, the first reference to
        count is a function call, whereas the second
        reference is a table name:
      
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
The parser should recognize the name of a built-in function as indicating a function call only when parsing what is expected to be an expression. That is, in nonexpression context, function names are permitted as identifiers.
However, some built-in functions have special parsing or implementation considerations, so the parser uses the following rules by default to distinguish whether their names are being used as function calls or as identifiers in nonexpression context:
            To use the name as a function call in an expression, there
            must be no whitespace between the name and the following
            “(” parenthesis character.
          
Conversely, to use the function name as an identifier, it must not be followed immediately by a parenthesis.
        The requirement that function calls be written with no
        whitespace between the name and the parenthesis applies only to
        the built-in functions that have special considerations.
        COUNT is one such name. The exact list of
        function names for which following whitespace determines their
        interpretation are those listed in the
        sql_functions[] array of the
        sql/lex.h source file. Before MySQL 5.1,
        these are rather numerous (about 200), so you may find it
        easiest to treat the no-whitespace requirement as applying to
        all function calls. In MySQL 5.1, parser improvements reduce to
        about 30 the number of affected function names.
      
        For functions not listed in the
        sql_functions[]) array, whitespace does not
        matter. They are interpreted as function calls only when used in
        expression context and may be used freely as identifiers
        otherwise. ASCII is one such name. However,
        for these nonaffected function names, interpretation may vary in
        expression context:
        func_name ()func_name ()
        The IGNORE_SPACE SQL mode can
        be used to modify how the parser treats function names that are
        whitespace-sensitive:
      
            With IGNORE_SPACE
            disabled, the parser interprets the name as a function call
            when there is no whitespace between the name and the
            following parenthesis. This occurs even when the function
            name is used in nonexpression context:
          
mysql> CREATE TABLE count(i INT);
ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax ...
near 'count(i INT)'
To eliminate the error and cause the name to be treated as an identifier, either use whitespace following the name or write it as a quoted identifier (or both):
CREATE TABLE count (i INT); CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
            With IGNORE_SPACE enabled,
            the parser loosens the requirement that there be no
            whitespace between the function name and the following
            parenthesis. This provides more flexibility in writing
            function calls. For example, either of the following
            function calls are legal:
          
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; SELECT COUNT (*) FROM mytable;
            However, enabling
            IGNORE_SPACE also has the
            side effect that the parser treats the affected function
            names as reserved words (see
            Section 8.3, “Reserved Words”). This means that a space
            following the name no longer signifies its use as an
            identifier. The name can be used in function calls with or
            without following whitespace, but causes a syntax error in
            nonexpression context unless it is quoted. For example, with
            IGNORE_SPACE enabled, both
            of the following statements fail with a syntax error because
            the parser interprets count as a reserved
            word:
          
CREATE TABLE count(i INT); CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
To use the function name in nonexpression context, write it as a quoted identifier:
CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
        To enable the IGNORE_SPACE SQL
        mode, use this statement:
      
SET sql_mode = 'IGNORE_SPACE';
        IGNORE_SPACE is also enabled
        by certain other composite modes such as
        ANSI that include it in their
        value:
      
SET sql_mode = 'ANSI';
        Check Section 5.1.8, “Server SQL Modes”, to see which composite
        modes enable IGNORE_SPACE.
      
        To minimize the dependency of SQL code on the
        IGNORE_SPACE setting, use
        these guidelines:
      
Avoid creating UDFs or stored functions that have the same name as a built-in function.
            Avoid using function names in nonexpression context. For
            example, these statements use count (one
            of the affected function names affected by
            IGNORE_SPACE), so they
            fail with or without whitespace following the name if
            IGNORE_SPACE is enabled:
          
CREATE TABLE count(i INT); CREATE TABLE count (i INT);
If you must use a function name in nonexpression context, write it as a quoted identifier:
CREATE TABLE `count`(i INT); CREATE TABLE `count` (i INT);
        The number of function names affected by
        IGNORE_SPACE was reduced
        significantly in MySQL 5.1.13, from about 200 to about 30. As of
        MySQL 5.1.13, only the following functions are still affected by
        the IGNORE_SPACE setting.
      
| ADDDATE | BIT_AND | BIT_OR | BIT_XOR | 
| CAST | COUNT | CURDATE | CURTIME | 
| DATE_ADD | DATE_SUB | EXTRACT | GROUP_CONCAT | 
| MAX | MID | MIN | NOW | 
| POSITION | SESSION_USER | STD | STDDEV | 
| STDDEV_POP | STDDEV_SAMP | SUBDATE | SUBSTR | 
| SUBSTRING | SUM | SYSDATE | SYSTEM_USER | 
| TRIM | VARIANCE | VAR_POP | VAR_SAMP | 
        For earlier versions of MySQL, check the contents of the
        sql_functions[] array in the
        sql/lex.h source file to see which
        functions are affected by
        IGNORE_SPACE.
      
        Incompatibility warning: The
        change in MySQL 5.1.13 that reduces the number of function names
        affected by IGNORE_SPACE
        improves the consistency of parser operation. However, it also
        introduces the possibility of incompatibility for old SQL code
        that relies on the following conditions:
      
            IGNORE_SPACE is disabled.
          
            The presence or absence of whitespace following a function
            name is used to distinguish between a built-in function and
            stored function that have the same name, such as
            PI() versus PI
            ().
          
        For functions that are no longer affected by
        IGNORE_SPACE as of MySQL
        5.1.13, that strategy no longer works. Either of the following
        approaches can be used if you have code that is subject to the
        preceding incompatibility:
      
            If a stored function has a name that conflicts with a
            built-in function, refer to the stored function with a
            schema name qualifier, regardless of whether whitespace is
            present. For example, write
            schema_name.PI()schema_name.PI
            ()
Alternatively, rename the stored function to use a nonconflicting name and change invocations of the function to use the new name.
Function Name Resolution
The following rules describe how the server resolves references to function names for function creation and invocation:
Built-in functions and user-defined functions
            As of MySQL 5.1.14, an error occurs if you try to create a
            UDF with the same name as a built-in function. Before
            5.1.14, a UDF can be created with the same name as a
            built-in function but the UDF cannot be invoked because the
            parser resolves invocations of the function to refer to the
            built-in function. For example, if you create a UDF named
            ABS, references to
            ABS() invoke the built-in
            function.
          
Built-in functions and stored functions
            It is possible to create a stored function with the same
            name as a built-in function, but to invoke the stored
            function it is necessary to qualify it with a schema name.
            For example, if you create a stored function named
            PI in the test schema,
            you invoke it as test.PI() because the
            server resolves PI() as a
            reference to the built-in function. As of 5.1.14, the server
            creates a warning if the stored function name collides with
            a built-in function name. The warning can be displayed with
            SHOW WARNINGS.
          
User-defined functions and stored functions
User-defined functions and stored functions share the same namespace, so you cannot create a UDF and a stored function with the same name.
The preceding function name resolution rules have implications for upgrading to versions of MySQL that implement new built-in functions:
            If you have already created a user-defined function with a
            given name and upgrade MySQL to a version that implements a
            new built-in function with the same name, the UDF becomes
            inaccessible. To correct this, use DROP
            FUNCTION to drop the UDF, and then use
            CREATE FUNCTION to re-create
            the UDF with a different nonconflicting name.
          
            If a new version of MySQL implements a built-in function
            with the same name as an existing stored function, you have
            two choices: Rename the stored function to use a
            nonconflicting name, or change calls to the function so that
            they use a schema qualifier (that is, use
            schema_name.func_name()


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