On Stack Overflow, there are a lot of questions where people use reserved keywords as identifiers (such as table and column names) and complain that their query is not working. A quick Google search query "mysql" "is a reserved keyword" site:stackoverflow.com
turns up 23,000 results. Even if we consider 50% of them as false positives, there are still a lot of questions.
Most of them has an answer that goes like:
FOO
is a reserved keyword. You should wrap it in backticks, like so: `FOO`
Some examples:
- Where is the error in this MySQL syntax?
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20152974/you-have-an-error-in-your-sql-syntax-check-the-manual-that-corresponds-to-your?rq=1
- MySQLSyntaxErrorException with table name "condition"
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21135645/cant-insert-database-with-mysql
As I see it, the issue originates from a simple mistake and is not going to benefit many people in the future. Such questions result in answers that repeat the same information over and over again. This pollutes the site with bad content.
There are two possibilities I can think of:
Close these questions as a typographical error. I think the following close-reason fits the bill:
This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
Create a canonical Q&A pair that addresses the problem, and close these questions as a duplicate of that one.
I'd like to hear your thoughts about this. Do you think this is useful? Which one do you think is the best approach, and why?
reserved keyword
error....the issue is originating from a simple typographical mistake and is not going to benefit many people in the future.
With 23,000 hits for that specific search, it seems that a lot of benefit is possible. As such, definitely at least a 'canonical' reference is called for.