8.1.6. Bit-Field Values

Bit-field values can be written using b'value' or 0bvalue notation. value is a binary value written using zeros and ones.

Bit-field notation is convenient for specifying values to be assigned to BIT columns:

mysql> CREATE TABLE t (b BIT(8));
mysql> INSERT INTO t SET b = b'11111111';
mysql> INSERT INTO t SET b = b'1010';
mysql> INSERT INTO t SET b = b'0101';

Bit values are returned as binary values. To display them in printable form, add 0 or use a conversion function such as BIN(). High-order 0 bits are not displayed in the converted value.

mysql> SELECT b+0, BIN(b+0), OCT(b+0), HEX(b+0) FROM t;
+------+----------+----------+----------+
| b+0  | BIN(b+0) | OCT(b+0) | HEX(b+0) |
+------+----------+----------+----------+
|  255 | 11111111 | 377      | FF       |
|   10 | 1010     | 12       | A        |
|    5 | 101      | 5        | 5        |
+------+----------+----------+----------+

Bit values assigned to user variables are treated as binary strings. To assign a bit value as a number to a user variable, use CAST() or +0:

mysql> SET @v1 = 0b1000001;
mysql> SET @v2 = CAST(0b1000001 AS UNSIGNED), @v3 = 0b1000001+0;
mysql> SELECT @v1, @v2, @v3;
+------+------+------+
| @v1  | @v2  | @v3  |
+------+------+------+
| A    |   65 |   65 |
+------+------+------+
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