13.5.4.2. SHOW COLLATION Syntax
SHOW COLLATION [LIKE 'pattern']
The output from SHOW COLLATION includes all
available character sets. It takes an optional
LIKE clause whose
pattern indicates which collation
names to match. For example:
mysql> SHOW COLLATION LIKE 'latin1%';
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| Collation | Charset | Id | Default | Compiled | Sortlen |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| latin1_german1_ci | latin1 | 5 | | | 0 |
| latin1_swedish_ci | latin1 | 8 | Yes | Yes | 0 |
| latin1_danish_ci | latin1 | 15 | | | 0 |
| latin1_german2_ci | latin1 | 31 | | Yes | 2 |
| latin1_bin | latin1 | 47 | | Yes | 0 |
| latin1_general_ci | latin1 | 48 | | | 0 |
| latin1_general_cs | latin1 | 49 | | | 0 |
| latin1_spanish_ci | latin1 | 94 | | | 0 |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
The Default column indicates whether a
collation is the default for its character set.
Compiled indicates whether the character
set is compiled into the server. Sortlen is
related to the amount of memory required to sort strings
expressed in the character set.