| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104 | [role="xpack"][testenv="basic"][[sql-like-rlike-operators]]=== LIKE and RLIKE Operators`LIKE` and `RLIKE` operators are commonly used to filter data based on string patterns. They usually act on a field placed on the left-hand side ofthe operator, but can also act on a constant (literal) expression. The right-hand side of the operator represents the pattern.Both can be used in the `WHERE` clause of the `SELECT` statement, but `LIKE` can also be used in other places, such as defining an<<sql-index-patterns, index pattern>> or across various <<sql-commands, SHOW commands>>.This section covers only the `SELECT ... WHERE ...` usage.NOTE: One significant difference between `LIKE`/`RLIKE` and the <<sql-functions-search, full-text search predicates>> is that the formeract on <<sql-multi-field, exact fields>> while the latter also work on <<text, analyzed>> fields. If the field used with `LIKE`/`RLIKE` doesn'thave an exact not-normalized sub-field (of <<keyword, keyword>> type) {es-sql} will not be able to run the query. If the field is either exactor has an exact sub-field, it will use it as is, or it will automatically use the exact sub-field even if it wasn't explicitly specified in the statement.[[sql-like-operator]]==== `LIKE`.Synopsis:[source, sql]--------------------------------------------------expression        <1>LIKE constant_exp <2>--------------------------------------------------<1> typically a field, or a constant expression<2> pattern.Description:The SQL `LIKE` operator is used to compare a value to similar values using wildcard operators. There are two wildcards used in conjunctionwith the `LIKE` operator:* The percent sign (%)* The underscore (_)The percent sign represents zero, one or multiple characters. The underscore represents a single number or character. These symbols can beused in combinations.[source, sql]----include-tagged::{sql-specs}/docs/docs.csv-spec[simpleLike]----There is, also, the possibility of using an escape character if one needs to match the wildcard characters themselves. This can be doneby using the `ESCAPE [escape_character]` statement after the `LIKE ...` operator: SELECT name, author FROM library WHERE name LIKE 'Dune/%' ESCAPE '/';In the example above `/` is defined as an escape character which needs to be placed before the `%` or `_` characters if one needs tomatch those characters in the pattern specifically. By default, there is no escape character defined.IMPORTANT: Even though `LIKE` is a valid option when searching or filtering in {es-sql}, full-text search predicates`MATCH` and `QUERY` are <<sql-like-prefer-full-text, faster and much more powerful and are the preferred alternative>>.[[sql-rlike-operator]]==== `RLIKE`.Synopsis:[source, sql]--------------------------------------------------expression         <1>RLIKE constant_exp <2>--------------------------------------------------<1> typically a field, or a constant expression<2> pattern.Description:This operator is similar to `LIKE`, but the user is not limited to search for a string based on a fixed pattern with the percent sign (`%`)and underscore (`_`); the pattern in this case is a regular expression which allows the construction of more flexible patterns.For more details about the regular expressions syntax, https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/11/docs/api/java.base/java/util/regex/Pattern.html[Java's Pattern class javadoc]is a good starting point.[source, sql]----include-tagged::{sql-specs}/docs/docs.csv-spec[simpleRLike]----IMPORTANT: Even though `RLIKE` is a valid option when searching or filtering in {es-sql}, full-text search predicates`MATCH` and `QUERY` are <<sql-like-prefer-full-text, faster and much more powerful and are the preferred alternative>>.[[sql-like-prefer-full-text]]==== Prefer full-text search predicatesWhen using `LIKE`/`RLIKE`, do consider using <<sql-functions-search, full-text search predicates>> which are faster, much more powerfuland offer the option of sorting by relevancy (results can be returned based on how well they matched).For example:[cols="<m,<m"]|===^s|LIKE/RLIKE                    ^s|QUERY/MATCH|`foo LIKE 'bar'`                    |`MATCH(foo, 'bar')`|`foo LIKE 'bar' AND tar LIKE 'goo'` |`MATCH('foo^2, tar^5', 'bar goo', 'operator=and')`|`foo LIKE 'barr'`                   |`QUERY('foo: bar~')`|`foo LIKE 'bar' AND tar LIKE 'goo'` |`QUERY('foo: bar AND tar: goo')`|`foo RLIKE 'ba.*'`                  |`MATCH(foo, 'ba', 'fuzziness=AUTO:1,5')`|`foo RLIKE 'b.{1}r'`                |`MATCH(foo, 'br', 'fuzziness=1')`|===
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