I have the following query
SELECT txt1 FROM T1 WHERE txt1 LIKE \'_a\\%\'
will that result in answers that have any char+a+\\+whatever?
% is a wildcard character that matches zero or more characters in a LIKE clause. _ is a wildcard character that maches exactly one character in a LIKE clause.
\ is a special character known as an escape character that indicates that the character directly following it should be interpreted literally (useful for single quotes, wildcard characters, etc.).
For example:
SELECT txt1 FROM T1 WHERE txt1 LIKE '_a%'
will select records with txt1 values of 'xa1', 'xa taco', 'ya anything really', etc.
Now let's say you want to actually search for the percent sign. In order to do this you need a special character that indicates % should not be treated as a wildcard. For example:
SELECT txt1 FROM T1 WHERE txt1 LIKE '_a\%'
will select records with txt1 values of 'ba%' (but nothing else).
Finally, a LIKE clause would typically contain a wildcard (otherwise you could just use = instead of LIKE). So you might see a query containing \%%. Here the first percent sign would be treated as a literal percent sign, but the second would be interpreted as a wildcard. For example:
SELECT txt1 FROM T1 WHERE txt1 LIKE '_a\%%'
will select records with txt1 values of 'da%something else', 'fa% taco', 'ma% bunch of tacos', etc.