热门面试题与答案和在线测试
面向面试准备、在线测试、教程与实战练习的学习平台

通过聚焦学习路径、模拟测试和面试实战内容持续提升技能。

WithoutBook 将分主题面试题、在线练习测试、教程和对比指南整合到一个响应式学习空间中。

Chapter 3

Databases, Tables, Columns, Data Types, and Schema Basics

Build a strong foundation in how MySQL organizes structured information through schemas and tables.

Inside this chapter

  1. What a Database and Table Mean
  2. A Simple Table Example
  3. Common Data Types
  4. Why Data Type Choice Matters
  5. Business Example

Series navigation

Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from MySQL basics to advanced performance, consistency, and production operations. Use the navigation at the bottom to move smoothly through the full tutorial series.

Tutorial Home

Chapter 3

What a Database and Table Mean

A database is a named container for related tables and other objects. A table stores rows of records, while columns define the shape of each record. This structure is the core of relational data design.

Chapter 3

A Simple Table Example

CREATE TABLE students (
    id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
    name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
    email VARCHAR(255) UNIQUE,
    enrolled_on DATE
);

This example shows column types, primary key usage, nullability, and uniqueness rules.

Chapter 3

Common Data Types

  • INT for integer values
  • VARCHAR for variable-length strings
  • TEXT for larger textual content
  • DATE and DATETIME for time-related values
  • DECIMAL for precise financial amounts
  • BOOLEAN or tiny integer style fields for yes/no state
Chapter 3

Why Data Type Choice Matters

Good type selection affects storage, performance, clarity, constraints, and application correctness. Financial numbers, for example, should usually avoid floating types where exact precision matters.

Chapter 3

Business Example

An employee table might store employee ID, full name, department, joining date, salary, and status flags. Schema design makes those business concepts explicit and queryable.

版权所有 © 2026,WithoutBook。