1.18 Specifying Queries on the Command Line
1.18.1 Problem
You want to specify a query
directly on the command line for mysql to execute.
1.18.2 Solution
mysql can
read a query from its argument list. Use the -e (or
--execute) option to specify a query on the
command line.
1.18.3 Discussion
For example, to find out how many records are in the
limbs table, run this command:
% mysql -e "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM limbs" cookbook
+----------+
| COUNT(*) |
+----------+
| 12 |
+----------+
To run multiple queries with the -e option, separate
them with semicolons:
% mysql -e "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM limbs;SELECT NOW( )" cookbook
+----------+
| COUNT(*) |
+----------+
| 12 |
+----------+
+---------------------+
| NOW( ) |
+---------------------+
| 2001-07-04 10:42:22 |
+---------------------+
1.18.4 See Also
By default, results generated by queries that are specified with
-e are displayed in tabular format if output goes to
the terminal, and in tab-delimited format otherwise. To produce a
different output style, see Recipe 1.22.
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