Table: Employees
+-------------+----------+ | Column Name | Type | +-------------+----------+ | employee_id | int | | name | varchar | | manager_id | int | | salary | int | +-------------+----------+ In SQL, employee_id is the primary key for this table. This table contains information about the employees, their salary, and the ID of their manager. Some employees do not have a manager (manager_id is null).
Find the IDs of the employees whose salary is strictly less than $30000
and whose manager left the company. When a manager leaves the company, their information is deleted from the Employees
table, but the reports still have their manager_id
set to the manager that left.
Return the result table ordered by employee_id
.
The result format is in the following example.
Example 1:
Input: Employees table: +-------------+-----------+------------+--------+ | employee_id | name | manager_id | salary | +-------------+-----------+------------+--------+ | 3 | Mila | 9 | 60301 | | 12 | Antonella | null | 31000 | | 13 | Emery | null | 67084 | | 1 | Kalel | 11 | 21241 | | 9 | Mikaela | null | 50937 | | 11 | Joziah | 6 | 28485 | +-------------+-----------+------------+--------+ Output: +-------------+ | employee_id | +-------------+ | 11 | +-------------+ Explanation: The employees with a salary less than $30000 are 1 (Kalel) and 11 (Joziah). Kalel's manager is employee 11, who is still in the company (Joziah). Joziah's manager is employee 6, who left the company because there is no row for employee 6 as it was deleted.
# Write your MySQL query statement below
SELECT a.employee_id
FROM
Employees AS a
LEFT JOIN Employees AS b ON a.manager_id = b.employee_id
WHERE b.employee_id IS NULL AND a.salary < 30000 AND a.manager_id IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY a.employee_id;
# Write your MySQL query statement below
SELECT employee_id
FROM Employees
WHERE salary < 30000 AND manager_id NOT IN (SELECT employee_id FROM Employees)
ORDER BY employee_id;