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The MySQL Workshop

You're reading from   The MySQL Workshop A practical guide to working with data and managing databases with MySQL

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839214905
Length 726 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Scott Cosentino Scott Cosentino
Author Profile Icon Scott Cosentino
Scott Cosentino
Thomas Pettit Thomas Pettit
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Thomas Pettit
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Creating Your Database
2. Chapter 1: Background Concepts FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Creating a Database 4. Chapter 3: Using SQL to Work with a Database 5. Chapter 4: Selecting, Aggregating, and Applying Functions 6. Section 2: Managing Your Database
7. Chapter 5: Correlating Data across Tables 8. Chapter 6: Stored Procedures and Other Objects 9. Chapter 7: Creating Database Clients in Node.js 10. Chapter 8: Working with Data Using Node.js 11. Section 3: Querying Your Database
12. Chapter 9: Microsoft Access – Part 1 13. Chapter 10: Microsoft Access – Part 2 14. Chapter 11: MS Excel VBA and MySQL – Part 1 15. Chapter 12: Working With Microsoft Excel VBA – Part 2 16. Section 4: Protecting Your Database
17. Chapter 13: Getting Data into MySQL 18. Chapter 14: Manipulating User Permissions 19. Chapter 15: Logical Backups 20. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Using the CSV storage engine to import data

After defining a CSV table, you can replace the CSV file. For that, you need to run the FLUSH TABLE <table> command to ensure that the server rereads this and then the data is available. Having the data in a CSV table, however, is probably not the endpoint you want to get to, as it doesn't support indexing or primary keys. So, the next step would be to use the following:

"INSERT INTO <new_table> SELECT * FROM <csv_table>"

Alternatively, you can run the following:

'ALTER TABLE <csv_table> ENGINE=InnoDB'

Either of the options can be used to convert the table to InnoDB. Once this is done, you should define a primary key and add indexes if needed. Let's see an exercise where we will make use of the CSV storage engine to import data.

Note

On Windows, always start the MySQL command-line client via the MySQL Command Line Client – Unicode entry. Non-Unicode causes text...

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