Exporting a MySQL table into a CSV file

前端 未结 4 1160
孤独总比滥情好
孤独总比滥情好 2020-12-14 01:45

I have a MySQL table which has to be taken out as a CSV file. The query I used is

SELECT \"ID\",\"NAME\",\"SALARY\",\"SAL1\",\"SAL2\",\"SAL3\",\"SAL4\",\"SAL         


        
相关标签:
4条回答
  • 2020-12-14 01:55

    I think you are looking for something like this.

    SET @sql = NULL;
    SELECT GROUP_CONCAT("'",COLUMN_NAME,"'")
     FROM
    (SELECT `COLUMN_NAME`
    FROM `INFORMATION_SCHEMA`.`COLUMNS`
    WHERE `TABLE_SCHEMA` = 'yourdatabasename'
    and `TABLE_NAME`='ffd_companies'
    ) AS colnames
    GROUP BY 'COLUMN_NAME'
    into @sql;
    
    SET @sql = concat ("SELECT", @sql, " from dual
    UNION ALL
    SELECT *
    FROM addstock25
    INTO OUTFILE 'E:\\JOSE DATA\\addstock7.csv'
    FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
    ENCLOSED BY '", '"',"'
    )"
    );
    
    PREPARE stmt FROM @sql;
    EXECUTE stmt;
    DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;
    

    Note that I added the WHERE clause TABLE_SCHEMA = 'yourdatabasename'.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-14 01:57

    I'm not seeing why you can't do

    SELECT *
    FROM addstock25
    INTO OUTFILE "E:\\JOSE DATA\\addstock7.csv"
    FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
    ENCLOSED BY '"'
    LINES TERMINATED BY '\n'
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-14 02:01

    This command almost gives you what you want, and it even works with a remote server. The only caveat is that it generates a TSV file (fields are separated by a tab).

    mysql mydb -e "select * from mytable" -B > mytable.tsv 
    

    But you could convert it to CSV using sed, as suggested in this answer:

    mysql mydb -e "select * from mytable" -B | sed "s/'/\'/;s/\t/\",\"/g;s/^/\"/;s/$/\"/;s/\n//g" > mytable.csv
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-14 02:02
    DESCRIBE addstock25;
    

    Strip the first column and the first three entries of that column (it depends on your usage). You will get the list of fields in addstock25.

    This will bring only field names using virtual tables derived in core... called information schema.

    SELECT `COLUMN_NAME` 
    FROM `INFORMATION_SCHEMA`.`COLUMNS` 
    WHERE `TABLE_NAME`='foo';
    

    Let’s say the name of this query would be sq_fieldnamelist.

    So, the above table has one column and it has the field names of the "foo" table.

    If directly writing like

    SELECT (sq_fieldnamelist)
    UNION ALL
    SELECT *
    FROM addstock25
    INTO OUTFILE "E:\\JOSE DATA\\addstock7.csv"
    FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
    ENCLOSED BY '"'
    LINES TERMINATED BY '\n
    

    MySQL will give an error. "subquery returns multiple rows"

    We must edit sq_fieldnamelist to concatenate all entries back to back, separated with commas.

    Select GROUP_CONCAT(COLUMN_NAME)
    FROM
    (SELECT `COLUMN_NAME` 
    FROM `INFORMATION_SCHEMA`.`COLUMNS` 
    WHERE `TABLE_NAME`='ffd_companies'
    LIMIT 3,100
    ) AS fafa
    GROUP BY 'COLUMN_NAME' // This group by is just to make group concatenation work
    

    Let's say this is sq_fieldnamelist2.

    If we edit sq_fieldnamelist like this, it will return only one value which is all field names separated with commas. So now we can put this subquery in your select statement to acquire the needed fields.

    SELECT (sq_fieldnamelist2)
    UNION ALL
    SELECT *
    FROM addstock25
    INTO OUTFILE "E:\\JOSE DATA\\addstock7.csv"
    FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
    ENCLOSED BY '"'
    LINES TERMINATED BY '\n
    

    You need to edit LIMIT 3,100 in sq_fieldnamelist2 for you own purpose.

    Let's say your table is like fil1, fil2...filN, sal1, sal2, sal3...., salI. To see the only salary fields, you should use LIMIT N, x > I+N. If you want to see all, use LIMIT 0, x > N+I.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题