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I find that find_in_set only search by a single string :-

find_in_set('a', 'a,b,c,d')

In the above example, 'a' is the only string used for search.

Is there any way to use find_in_set kind of functionality and search by multiple strings, like :-

find_in_set('a,b,c', 'a,b,c,d')

In the above example, I want to search by three strings 'a,b,c'.

One way I see is using OR

find_in_set('a', 'a,b,c,d') OR find_in_set('b', 'a,b,c,d') OR find_in_set('b', 'a,b,c,d')

Is there any other way than this?

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1 Answer

up vote 5 down vote accepted

mysql function find_in_set can search only for one string in a set of strings. the first argument is a string, so there is no way to make it parse your comma separated string into strings (you can't use commas in SET elements at all!). the second argument is a SET, which in turn is represented by a comma separated string hence your wish to find_in_set('a,b,c', 'a,b,c,d') which works fine, but it surely can't find a string 'a,b,c' in any SET by definition - it contains commas.

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Yes, you are right. I think The only solution for my problem will be using OR and finset. Like "find_in_set('a', 'a,b,c,d') OR find_in_set('b', 'a,b,c,d') OR find_in_set('b', 'a,b,c,d')". – chapagain Feb 24 '11 at 5:21

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