Case-sensitivity
Handling case-sensitivity with different database engines.
Most database engines have case-sensitive object identifiers. In
most cases, when you do not specify identifiers in double quotes,
the SQL parser automatically converts names to uppercase or lowercase,
so that the identifiers match if the objects are also created without
double quoted identifiers.
CREATE TABLE Customer ( cust_ID INTEGER )
In ORACLE, this statement would create a table named "CUSTOMER
"
with a "CUST_ID
" column.
This table shows the behavior of each database engine regarding case sensitivity and double quoted identifiers:
Database Server Type | Un-quoted names | Double-quoted names |
---|---|---|
IBM® DB2® LUW | Converts to uppercase | Case sensitive |
IBM Informix® (1) | Converts to lowercase | Syntax disallowed (non-ANSI mode) |
Microsoft™ SQL Server (2) | Not converted, kept as is | Case sensitive |
Oracle® MySQL | Not converted, kept as is | Syntax disallowed |
Oracle Database Server | Converts to uppercase | Uppercase |
PostgreSQL | Converts to lowercase | Lowercase |
SAP HANA® | Converts to uppercase | Case sensitive |
SQLite | Not converted, kept as is | Case insensitive |
(1) If not ANSI database mode.
(2) When case-sensitive charset/collation used.
Take care with database servers marked in red, because object identifiers
are case sensitive and are not converted to uppercase or lowercase
if not delimited by double-quotes. This means that, by error, you
can create two tables with a similar name:
CREATE TABLE customer ( cust_id INTEGER ) -- first table
CREATE TABLE Customer ( cust_id INTEGER ) -- second table
It is recommended to design databases with lowercase table and column names.