The utf8mb3
character set has these characteristics:
-
Supports BMP characters only (no support for supplementary characters)
-
Requires a maximum of three bytes per multibyte character.
Applications that use UTF-8 data but require supplementary character support should use utf8mb4
rather than utf8mb3
(see Section 12.9.1, “The utf8mb4 Character Set (4-Byte UTF-8 Unicode Encoding)”).
Exactly the same set of characters is available in utf8mb3
and ucs2
. That is, they have the same repertoire.
The recommended character set for MySQL is utf8mb4
. All new applications should use utf8mb4
.
The utf8mb3
character set is deprecated. utf8mb3
remains supported for the lifetimes of the MySQL 8.0.x and following LTS release series, as well as in MySQL 8.3.
Expect utf8mb3
to be removed in a future major release of MySQL.
Since changing character sets can be a complex and time-consuming task, you should begin to prepare for this change now by using utf8mb4
for new applications. For guidance in converting existing applications which use utfmb3, see Section 12.9.8, “Converting Between 3-Byte and 4-Byte Unicode Character Sets”.
utf8mb3
can be used in CHARACTER SET
clauses, and utf8mb3_
in collation_substring
COLLATE
clauses, where collation_substring
is bin
, czech_ci
, danish_ci
, esperanto_ci
, estonian_ci
, and so forth. For example:
CREATE TABLE t (s1 CHAR(1)) CHARACTER SET utf8mb3;
SELECT * FROM t WHERE s1 COLLATE utf8mb3_general_ci = 'x';
DECLARE x VARCHAR(5) CHARACTER SET utf8mb3 COLLATE utf8mb3_danish_ci;
SELECT CAST('a' AS CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8mb4) COLLATE utf8mb4_czech_ci;
In statements such as SHOW CREATE TABLE
or SELECT CHARACTER_SET_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
or SELECT COLLATION_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
, character sets or collation names prefixed with utf8
or utf8_
are displayed using utf8mb3
or utf8mb3_
, respectively.
utf8mb3
is also valid (but deprecated) in contexts other than CHARACTER SET
clauses. For example:
mysqld --character-set-server=utf8mb3
SET NAMES 'utf8mb3'; /* and other SET statements that have similar effect */
SELECT _utf8mb3 'a';
For information about data type storage as it relates to multibyte character sets, see String Type Storage Requirements.