On 6 Apr 2011, at 02:37, Dan Langille <d...@langille.org> wrote:

> 
> On Apr 5, 2011, at 9:31 PM, Kernel Panic wrote:
>> 
>> USE bacula;
>> SELECT * FROM Filename WHERE name LIKE '%ZFS%';
>> SELECT * FROM Filename WHERE name LIKE '%zfs%';
>> 
>> Although the commands worked, they only returned case-sensitive
>> matches, despite MySQL's documentation stating that pattern matching
>> is case-insensitive by default:
>> http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/pattern-matching.html
>> 
>> Can anyone help me?
> 
> Have you tried ilike instead of like?  It is available on PostgreSQL.  I 
> don't know about MySQL.
> 
> Consider also:
> 
> SELECT * FROM Filename where lower(name) LIKE %zfs%;
> -------------------------------------------------

In Postgres a case insensitive regex match can be done like this:

name ~* 'zfs'
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Xperia(TM) PLAY
It's a major breakthrough. An authentic gaming
smartphone on the nation's most reliable network.
And it wants your games.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/verizon-sfdev
_______________________________________________
Bacula-users mailing list
Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users

Reply via email to