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FixedString(N)

A fixed-length string of N bytes (neither characters nor code points).

To declare a column of FixedString type, use the following syntax:

<column_name> FixedString(N)

Where N is a natural number.

The FixedString type is efficient when data has the length of precisely N bytes. In all other cases, it is likely to reduce efficiency.

Examples of the values that can be efficiently stored in FixedString-typed columns:

  • The binary representation of IP addresses (FixedString(16) for IPv6).
  • Language codes (ru_RU, en_US ... ).
  • Currency codes (USD, RUB ... ).
  • Binary representation of hashes (FixedString(16) for MD5, FixedString(32) for SHA256).

To store UUID values, use the UUID data type.

When inserting the data, ClickHouse:

  • Complements a string with null bytes if the string contains fewer than N bytes.
  • Throws the Too large value for FixedString(N) exception if the string contains more than N bytes.

Let's consider the following table with the single FixedString(2) column:



INSERT INTO FixedStringTable VALUES ('a'), ('ab'), ('');
SELECT
    name,
    toTypeName(name),
    length(name),
    empty(name)
FROM FixedStringTable;
┌─name─┬─toTypeName(name)─┬─length(name)─┬─empty(name)─┐
│ a    │ FixedString(2)   │            2 │           0 │
│ ab   │ FixedString(2)   │            2 │           0 │
│      │ FixedString(2)   │            2 │           1 │
└──────┴──────────────────┴──────────────┴─────────────┘

Note that the length of the FixedString(N) value is constant. The length function returns N even if the FixedString(N) value is filled only with null bytes, but the empty function returns 1 in this case.

Selecting data with WHERE clause return various result depending on how the condition is specified:

  • If equality operator = or == or equals function used, ClickHouse doesn't take \0 char into consideration, i.e. queries SELECT * FROM FixedStringTable WHERE name = 'a'; and SELECT * FROM FixedStringTable WHERE name = 'a\0'; return the same result.
  • If LIKE clause is used, ClickHouse does take \0 char into consideration, so one may need to explicitly specify \0 char in the filter condition.
SELECT name
FROM FixedStringTable
WHERE name = 'a'
FORMAT JSONStringsEachRow

{"name":"a\u0000"}


SELECT name
FROM FixedStringTable
WHERE name = 'a\0'
FORMAT JSONStringsEachRow

{"name":"a\u0000"}


SELECT name
FROM FixedStringTable
WHERE name = 'a'
FORMAT JSONStringsEachRow

Query id: c32cec28-bb9e-4650-86ce-d74a1694d79e

{"name":"a\u0000"}


SELECT name
FROM FixedStringTable
WHERE name LIKE 'a'
FORMAT JSONStringsEachRow

0 rows in set.


SELECT name
FROM FixedStringTable
WHERE name LIKE 'a\0'
FORMAT JSONStringsEachRow

{"name":"a\u0000"}