I have two tables with similar column names and I need to return records from the left table which are not found in the right table? I have a primary key(column) which will help me to compare both tables. Which join is preferred?
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2Seems quite a basic query... What have you tried so far ?– Laurent S.Commented Sep 5, 2014 at 12:09
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1@Siva Left outer join returns all the rows from the left table even if there are no matching records in the right table. I need to return matching records that are found in left table but not found in the right table.– StarJediCommented Sep 5, 2014 at 12:23
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Are you still having issues with your query?– KritnerCommented Sep 6, 2014 at 18:04
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1stackoverflow.com/questions/406294/… Highly recommend checking out this answer.– Ciprianna DuddingCommented Jan 18, 2016 at 20:30
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1Does this answer your question? SQL - find records from one table which don't exist in another– philipxyCommented Mar 1, 2020 at 23:23
8 Answers
Try This
SELECT f.*
FROM first_table f LEFT JOIN second_table s ON f.key=s.key
WHERE s.key is NULL
For more please read this article : Joins in Sql Server
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5
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@HaydenThring s.key = NULL means no matching row found in second table,so condition is true i think Commented Mar 22, 2017 at 3:52
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sorry i meant "the key to getting this to work is" not to be confused with use of "key" as a variable in this answer Commented Mar 22, 2017 at 5:37
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In the left join, A&B will the output as per the diagram. Can you clarify me if adding "WHERE s.key is NULL" at the end of statement will remove the results in the B? Commented Oct 3, 2019 at 7:04
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NOT EXISTS might be better: dba.stackexchange.com/questions/121034/… Commented May 8, 2023 at 7:24
If you are asking for T-SQL then lets look at fundamentals first. There are three types of joins here each with its own set of logical processing phases as:
- A
cross join
is simplest of all. It implements only one logical query processing phase, aCartesian Product
. This phase operates on the two tables provided as inputs to the join and produces a Cartesian product of the two. That is, each row from one input is matched with all rows from the other. So if you have m rows in one table and n rows in the other, you get m×n rows in the result. - Then are
Inner joins
: They apply two logical query processing phases:A Cartesian product
between the two input tables as in a cross join, and then itfilters
rows based on a predicate that you specify inON
clause (also known asJoin condition
). Next comes the third type of joins,
Outer Joins
:In an
outer join
, you mark a table as apreserved
table by using the keywordsLEFT OUTER JOIN
,RIGHT OUTER JOIN
, orFULL OUTER JOIN
between the table names. TheOUTER
keyword isoptional
. TheLEFT
keyword means that the rows of theleft table
are preserved; theRIGHT
keyword means that the rows in theright table
are preserved; and theFULL
keyword means that the rows inboth
theleft
andright
tables are preserved.The third logical query processing phase of an
outer join
identifies the rows from the preserved table that did not find matches in the other table based on theON
predicate. This phase adds those rows to the result table produced by the first two phases of the join, and usesNULL
marks as placeholders for the attributes from the nonpreserved side of the join in those outer rows.
Now if we look at the question: To return records from the left table which are not found in the right table use Left outer join
and filter out the rows with NULL
values for the attributes from the right side of the join.
I also like to use NOT EXISTS. When it comes to performance if index correctly it should perform the same as a LEFT JOIN or better. Plus its easier to read.
SELECT Column1
FROM TableA a
WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT Column1
FROM Tableb b
WHERE a.Column1 = b.Column1
)
This page gives a decent breakdown of the different join types, as well as venn diagram visualizations to help... well... visualize the difference in the joins.
As the comments said this is a quite basic query from the sounds of it, so you should try to understand the differences between the joins and what they actually mean.
Check out http://blog.codinghorror.com/a-visual-explanation-of-sql-joins/
You're looking for a query such as:
DECLARE @table1 TABLE (test int)
DECLARE @table2 TABLE (test int)
INSERT INTO @table1
(
test
)
SELECT 1
UNION ALL SELECT 2
INSERT INTO @table2
(
test
)
SELECT 1
UNION ALL SELECT 3
-- Here's the important part
SELECT a.*
FROM @table1 a
LEFT join @table2 b on a.test = b.test -- this will return all rows from a
WHERE b.test IS null -- this then excludes that which exist in both a and b
-- Returned results:
2
I can't add anything but a code example to the other two answers: however, I find it can be useful to see it in action (the other answers, in my opinion, are better because they explain it).
DECLARE @testLeft TABLE (ID INT, SomeValue VARCHAR(1))
DECLARE @testRight TABLE (ID INT, SomeOtherValue VARCHAR(1))
INSERT INTO @testLeft (ID, SomeValue) VALUES (1, 'A')
INSERT INTO @testLeft (ID, SomeValue) VALUES (2, 'B')
INSERT INTO @testLeft (ID, SomeValue) VALUES (3, 'C')
INSERT INTO @testRight (ID, SomeOtherValue) VALUES (1, 'X')
INSERT INTO @testRight (ID, SomeOtherValue) VALUES (3, 'Z')
SELECT l.*
FROM
@testLeft l
LEFT JOIN
@testRight r ON
l.ID = r.ID
WHERE r.ID IS NULL
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if you are using Mysql replace the last line WHERE r.ID IS NULL with WHERE ISNULL(r.ID)– AnandaCommented Jul 24, 2016 at 9:01
select * from left table where key field not in (select key field from right table)
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Can you post an explanation for why your code works? also use the formatting tools to better format your answer.– SpoodyCommented Apr 12, 2018 at 19:58
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1This is one of the correct ways to solve the question. But, its performance is not good if we work with 10k, 20k records– NoNameCommented Nov 1, 2018 at 8:29
I also like to use NOT IN. When it comes to performance if index correctly it should perform the same as a LEFT JOIN or better. Plus its easier to read.
SELECT Column1
FROM TableA a
WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT Column2
FROM Tableb b
WHERE a.Column1 = b.Column2
)
This is an example from real life work, I was asked to supply a list of users that bought from our site in the last 6 months but not in the last 3 months.
For me, the most understandable way I can think of is like so:
--Users that bought from us 6 months ago and between 3 months ago.
DECLARE @6To3MonthsUsers table (UserID int,OrderDate datetime)
INSERT @6To3MonthsUsers
select u.ID,opd.OrderDate
from OrdersPaid opd
inner join Orders o
on opd.OrderID = o.ID
inner join Users u
on o.BuyerID = u.ID
where 1=1
and opd.OrderDate BETWEEN DATEADD(m,-6,GETDATE()) and DATEADD(m,-3,GETDATE())
--Users that bought from us in the last 3 months
DECLARE @Last3MonthsUsers table (UserID int,OrderDate datetime)
INSERT @Last3MonthsUsers
select u.ID,opd.OrderDate
from OrdersPaid opd
inner join Orders o
on opd.OrderID = o.ID
inner join Users u
on o.BuyerID = u.ID
where 1=1
and opd.OrderDate BETWEEN DATEADD(m,-3,GETDATE()) and GETDATE()
Now, with these 2 tables in my hands I need to get only the users from the table @6To3MonthsUsers that are not in @Last3MonthsUsers table.
There are 2 simple ways to achieve that:
Using Left Join:
select distinct a.UserID from @6To3MonthsUsers a left join @Last3MonthsUsers b on a.UserID = b.UserID where b.UserID is null
Not in:
select distinct a.UserID from @6To3MonthsUsers a where a.UserID not in (select b.UserID from @Last3MonthsUsers b)
Both ways will get me the same result, I personally prefer the second way because it's more readable.