Skip to content
Advertisement

Search for “whole word match” in MySQL

I would like to write an SQL query that searches for a keyword in a text field, but only if it is a “whole word match” (e.g. when I search for “rid”, it should not match “arid”, but it should match “a rid”.

I am using MySQL.

Fortunately, performance is not critical in this application, and the database size and string size are both comfortably small, but I would prefer to do it in the SQL than in the PHP driving it.

Advertisement

Answer

You can use REGEXP and the [[:<:]] and [[:>:]] word-boundary markers:

SELECT *
FROM table 
WHERE keywords REGEXP '[[:<:]]rid[[:>:]]'

Update for 2020: (actually 2018+)

MySQL updated its RegExp-Engine in version 8.0.4, so you will now need to use the “standard” word boundary marker b:

SELECT *
FROM table 
WHERE keywords REGEXP '\brid\b'

Also be aware that you need to escape the backslash by putting a second backslash.

User contributions licensed under: CC BY-SA
10 People found this is helpful
Advertisement