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Home/ Questions/Q 7416599
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 29, 20262026-05-29T07:31:50+00:00 2026-05-29T07:31:50+00:00

Does a mediumtext and a varchar(65535) are the same thing ? What I mean

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Does a mediumtext and a varchar(65535) are the same thing ?
What I mean here is do they both store the data directly in the table or do the mediumtext type is storing a pointer ?
I’m asking this because if I try to create a varchar(65535) it is automatically transform into a mediumtext (if the length is bigger than 21811 actually).


I’ve got another related question which is:

I’ve got some fields in a table that I want to be able to store a lot of characters (around 10’000). But in reality, it will almost all the time store no more than 10 characters.

So my question is, do I need to use a text or a varchar(10000) type for best performance ?

I believe a varchar type is more appropriate for this case.

Thanks in advance for your answers.

Edit

The thing I don’t understand is why they say that since mysql 5.0.3, we can create a varchar(65535) but when we try to do this, it convert it to a mediumtext. For me the difference between varchar and text (mediumtext include) is the way how they are store (using a pointer or not).
So why do they say that we can create varchar with a length of 65535 if we can’t?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-29T07:31:51+00:00Added an answer on May 29, 2026 at 7:31 am

    I’m answering to my own question:

    That’s because I’m using a multi-byte character. If you use an utf-8 collation, you will not be able to create a varchar with about more than 21000 chars. But if you use ascii, you will.

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