RENAME TABLE tb1 TO tb2;
RENAME TABLE old_name TO new_name;
-- or
ALTER TABLE old_name RENAME TO new_name;
-- or
ALTER TABLE old_name RENAME new_name;
ALTER TABLE employees RENAME COLUMN id TO employ_id;
RENAME TABLE old_table TO new_table;
RENAME TABLE old_table_name TO new_table_name;
or
ALTER TABLE old_table_name RENAME TO new_table_name;
or
ALTER TABLE old_table_name RENAME new_table_name;
ALTER TABLE your_table_name RENAME COLUMN original_column_name TO new_column_name;
ALTER TABLE table_name CHANGE old_column_name new_column_name datatype(length);
ALTER TABLE tableName CHANGE `oldcolname` `newcolname` datatype(length);
(you can remove the backticks if it doesn't work)
Because business requirements change, we need to rename the current table to a new one to better reflect the new situation. MySQL provides us with a very useful statement that changes the name of one or more tables.
To change one or more tables, we use the RENAME TABLE statement as follows:
RENAME TABLE old_table_name TO new_table_name;
The old table ( old_table_name) must exist, and the new table ( new_table_name) must not. If the new table new_table_name does exist, the statement will fail.
In addition to the tables, we can use the RENAME TABLE statement to rename views.