Erick Papadakis wrote:
So how should I make a database rule in MySQL to not allow blank
strings. Basically to REQUIRE a value for that column, whether it is
NULL or NADA or VOID or whatever you wish to call it. I just want to
make sure that something, some value, is entered for a column. Would
appreciate any thoughts or pointers.

Does PostgreSQL suffer from this oddity as well? This distinction
between an empty string and a NULL? Could you also please give me an
example of where this would be useful from a business logic
standpoint? Why should a NULL be different from an empty string,
what's the big mysterious difference?

It's not an oddity.

An empty string is a KNOWN value. You know exactly what that value is - it's an empty string.

A NULL is UNKNOWN - it doesn't have a value at all.



In postgres, to stop an empty blank string:

create table a(a text not null check (char_length(a) > 0));

though that allows a single space in..

See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/interactive/ddl-constraints.html

and

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/interactive/ddl-alter.html#AEN2302


No idea about how to do this in mysql, search their documentation.

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