
- MySQL - Home
- MySQL - Introduction
- MySQL - Features
- MySQL - Versions
- MySQL - Variables
- MySQL - Installation
- MySQL - Administration
- MySQL - PHP Syntax
- MySQL - Node.js Syntax
- MySQL - Java Syntax
- MySQL - Python Syntax
- MySQL - Connection
- MySQL - Workbench
- MySQL Databases
- MySQL - Create Database
- MySQL - Drop Database
- MySQL - Select Database
- MySQL - Show Database
- MySQL - Copy Database
- MySQL - Database Export
- MySQL - Database Import
- MySQL - Database Info
- MySQL Users
- MySQL - Create Users
- MySQL - Drop Users
- MySQL - Show Users
- MySQL - Change Password
- MySQL - Grant Privileges
- MySQL - Show Privileges
- MySQL - Revoke Privileges
- MySQL - Lock User Account
- MySQL - Unlock User Account
- MySQL Tables
- MySQL - Create Tables
- MySQL - Show Tables
- MySQL - Alter Tables
- MySQL - Rename Tables
- MySQL - Clone Tables
- MySQL - Truncate Tables
- MySQL - Temporary Tables
- MySQL - Repair Tables
- MySQL - Describe Tables
- MySQL - Add/Delete Columns
- MySQL - Show Columns
- MySQL - Rename Columns
- MySQL - Table Locking
- MySQL - Drop Tables
- MySQL - Derived Tables
- MySQL Queries
- MySQL - Queries
- MySQL - Constraints
- MySQL - Insert Query
- MySQL - Select Query
- MySQL - Update Query
- MySQL - Delete Query
- MySQL - Replace Query
- MySQL - Insert Ignore
- MySQL - Insert on Duplicate Key Update
- MySQL - Insert Into Select
- MySQL Indexes
- MySQL - Indexes
- MySQL - Create Index
- MySQL - Drop Index
- MySQL - Show Indexes
- MySQL - Unique Index
- MySQL - Clustered Index
- MySQL - Non-Clustered Index
- MySQL Operators and Clauses
- MySQL - Where Clause
- MySQL - Limit Clause
- MySQL - Distinct Clause
- MySQL - Order By Clause
- MySQL - Group By Clause
- MySQL - Having Clause
- MySQL - AND Operator
- MySQL - OR Operator
- MySQL - Like Operator
- MySQL - IN Operator
- MySQL - ANY Operator
- MySQL - EXISTS Operator
- MySQL - NOT Operator
- MySQL - NOT EQUAL Operator
- MySQL - IS NULL Operator
- MySQL - IS NOT NULL Operator
- MySQL - Between Operator
- MySQL - UNION Operator
- MySQL - UNION vs UNION ALL
- MySQL - MINUS Operator
- MySQL - INTERSECT Operator
- MySQL - INTERVAL Operator
- MySQL Joins
- MySQL - Using Joins
- MySQL - Inner Join
- MySQL - Left Join
- MySQL - Right Join
- MySQL - Cross Join
- MySQL - Full Join
- MySQL - Self Join
- MySQL - Delete Join
- MySQL - Update Join
- MySQL - Union vs Join
- MySQL Keys
- MySQL - Unique Key
- MySQL - Primary Key
- MySQL - Foreign Key
- MySQL - Composite Key
- MySQL - Alternate Key
- MySQL Triggers
- MySQL - Triggers
- MySQL - Create Trigger
- MySQL - Show Trigger
- MySQL - Drop Trigger
- MySQL - Before Insert Trigger
- MySQL - After Insert Trigger
- MySQL - Before Update Trigger
- MySQL - After Update Trigger
- MySQL - Before Delete Trigger
- MySQL - After Delete Trigger
- MySQL Data Types
- MySQL - Data Types
- MySQL - VARCHAR
- MySQL - BOOLEAN
- MySQL - ENUM
- MySQL - DECIMAL
- MySQL - INT
- MySQL - FLOAT
- MySQL - BIT
- MySQL - TINYINT
- MySQL - BLOB
- MySQL - SET
- MySQL Regular Expressions
- MySQL - Regular Expressions
- MySQL - RLIKE Operator
- MySQL - NOT LIKE Operator
- MySQL - NOT REGEXP Operator
- MySQL - regexp_instr() Function
- MySQL - regexp_like() Function
- MySQL - regexp_replace() Function
- MySQL - regexp_substr() Function
- MySQL Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Natural Language Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Boolean Fulltext Search
- MySQL - Query Expansion Fulltext Search
- MySQL - ngram Fulltext Parser
- MySQL Functions & Operators
- MySQL - Date and Time Functions
- MySQL - Arithmetic Operators
- MySQL - Numeric Functions
- MySQL - String Functions
- MySQL - Aggregate Functions
- MySQL Misc Concepts
- MySQL - NULL Values
- MySQL - Transactions
- MySQL - Using Sequences
- MySQL - Handling Duplicates
- MySQL - SQL Injection
- MySQL - SubQuery
- MySQL - Comments
- MySQL - Check Constraints
- MySQL - Storage Engines
- MySQL - Export Table into CSV File
- MySQL - Import CSV File into Database
- MySQL - UUID
- MySQL - Common Table Expressions
- MySQL - On Delete Cascade
- MySQL - Upsert
- MySQL - Horizontal Partitioning
- MySQL - Vertical Partitioning
- MySQL - Cursor
- MySQL - Stored Functions
- MySQL - Signal
- MySQL - Resignal
- MySQL - Character Set
- MySQL - Collation
- MySQL - Wildcards
- MySQL - Alias
- MySQL - ROLLUP
- MySQL - Today Date
- MySQL - Literals
- MySQL - Stored Procedure
- MySQL - Explain
- MySQL - JSON
- MySQL - Standard Deviation
- MySQL - Find Duplicate Records
- MySQL - Delete Duplicate Records
- MySQL - Select Random Records
- MySQL - Show Processlist
- MySQL - Change Column Type
- MySQL - Reset Auto-Increment
- MySQL - Coalesce() Function
MySQL BIN() Function
The MySQL BIN() function is a built-in string function that converts an integer value to its binary equivalent as a string.
This function accepts a longlong (BIGINT) numeric value as its parameter and returns the string representation of the binary value. If you pass a NULL value as the argument, the function will return NULL.
The binary representation is a base-2 numeral system with only two digits: 0 and 1.
Syntax
Following is the syntax of MySQL BIN() function −
BIN(N)
Parameters
This function takes an integer value as a parameter.
Return Value
This function returns the binary representation of the given integer as a string.
Example
Following is an example of the MySQL BIN() function. Here, we are retrieving the binary representation of the number 255 −
SELECT BIN(225);
Following is the output of the above code −
BIN(225) |
---|
11100001 |
Example
Following is another example with a different number −
SELECT BIN(53558);
Output of the above code is as shown below −
BIN(53558) |
---|
1101000100110110 |
Example
If you pass a string value as an argument, the function will return 0 −
SELECT BIN('test');
The output obtained is as follows −
BIN('test') |
---|
0 |
Example
The BIN() function is equivalent to the CONV() function with base 10 and base 2 −
SELECT CONV(2256,10,2);
The result produced by CONV() is as follows −
CONV(2256,10,2) |
---|
100011010000 |
If you pass the same value to the BIN() function, the result will be the same −
SELECT BIN(2256);
We get the output as follows −
BIN(2256) |
---|
100011010000 |
Example
If a NULL value is passed as the parameter to the BIN() function, it returns NULL −
SELECT BIN(NULL);
Following is the output of the above code −
BIN(NULL) |
---|
NULL |
Example
Additionally, you can also pass a column name of a table as a parameter to this function and get binary values for all the numbers in it.
Let us create a table named "STUDENTS_TABLE" and insert records into it using CREATE and INSERT statements as shown below −
CREATE TABLE STUDENTS_TABLE ( name VARCHAR(15), marks INT, grade CHAR );
Now, let us insert records into it using the INSERT statement −
INSERT INTO STUDENTS_TABLE VALUES ('Raju', 80, 'A'), ('Rahman', 60, 'B'), ('Robert', 45, 'C');
The STUDENTS_TABLE obtained is as follows −
name | marks | grade |
---|---|---|
Raju | 80 | A |
Rahman | 60 | B |
Robert | 45 | C |
Following query retrieves the binary values of the marks in the STUDENTS_TABLE, along with other student details −
SELECT *, BIN(marks) FROM STUDENTS_TABLE;
After executing the above code, we get the following output −
name | marks | grade | BIN(marks) |
---|---|---|---|
Raju | 80 | A | 1010000 |
Rahman | 60 | B | 111100 |
Robert | 45 | C | 101101 |