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| author | Claude Paroz <claude@2xlibre.net> | 2013-11-01 10:43:27 +0100 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Claude Paroz <claude@2xlibre.net> | 2013-11-01 10:46:39 +0100 |
| commit | f03c699159af53725b08aa5d8f7efb74b4662816 (patch) | |
| tree | 5d448b4a032e088671849a6be503e4b3bbbb7ae1 | |
| parent | 8f104bb8d51835c240bbc7f468032b798a263b24 (diff) | |
[1.6.x] Fixed #21359 -- Corrected MySQL collation name in databases docs
Thanks k_sze for the report.
Backport of 67c6c1a7c from master.
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/ref/databases.txt | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ref/databases.txt b/docs/ref/databases.txt index 884613a136..960e7b8802 100644 --- a/docs/ref/databases.txt +++ b/docs/ref/databases.txt @@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ the model definition. .. _documented thoroughly: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/charset.html By default, with a UTF-8 database, MySQL will use the -``utf8_general_ci_swedish`` collation. This results in all string equality +``utf8_general_ci`` collation. This results in all string equality comparisons being done in a *case-insensitive* manner. That is, ``"Fred"`` and ``"freD"`` are considered equal at the database level. If you have a unique constraint on a field, it would be illegal to try to insert both ``"aa"`` and @@ -340,7 +340,7 @@ bytestrings (which shouldn't be too difficult) as described above is the recommended solution. Should you decide to use ``utf8_bin`` collation for some of your tables with -MySQLdb 1.2.1p2 or 1.2.2, you should still use ``utf8_collation_ci_swedish`` +MySQLdb 1.2.1p2 or 1.2.2, you should still use ``utf8_general_ci`` (the default) collation for the ``django.contrib.sessions.models.Session`` table (usually called ``django_session``) and the ``django.contrib.admin.models.LogEntry`` table (usually called |
