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The world.sql file contains sample data for a
world database that you can play with. The file
is available for download from
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/.
The sample data used in the world database is
Copyright Statistics Finland,
http://www.stat.fi/worldinfigures.
To load the contents of the world.sql file into
MySQL, use the following procedure:
Change directory to where the world.sql
file is located
If your current directory is not the same as the location of the
world.sql file, use a cd
command to change location.
Connect to the MySQL server using the mysql program
At your command-line prompt, issue this command:
shell> mysql -u root -p
This command connects to the server using the MySQL
root account to make sure that you'll have
permission to create the world database. The
--p option tells mysql to
prompt you for the root password. Enter the
password when prompted. (Remember that the MySQL
root account is not the same as the operating
system root account and probably will have a
different password.)
Create the world database and select it as
the default database:
In the mysql program, issue the following statements:
mysql>CREATE DATABASE world;mysql>USE world;
Load the contents of world.sql into the
world database
Issue a SOURCE command to tell
mysql to read and process the contents of
world.sql:
mysql> SOURCE world.sql;
You'll see quite a bit of output as mysql
reads queries from the world.sql file and
executes them.
After mysql finishes processing the
world.sql file, try this statement:
mysql> SHOW TABLES;
+-----------------+
| Tables_in_world |
+-----------------+
| City |
| Country |
| CountryLanguage |
+-----------------+
The output should list all three of the tables shown. Depending on
your server configuration, SHOW
TABLES may display the table names in lowercase.
If so, use lowercase names whenever you refer to the tables by name
later.
The world tables contain the following types of
information:
Country: Information about countries of the
world.
City: Information about some of the cities in
those countries.
CountryLanguage: Languages spoken in each
country.
To see what columns each table contains, use
DESCRIBE. For example:
mysql>DESCRIBE Country;mysql>DESCRIBE City;mysql>DESCRIBE CountryLanguage;
