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Opérateur SQL NON

SQL NOT est un opérateur booléen utilisé avec la clause WHERE. L'opérateur NOT affiche les enregistrements si l'expression est fausse. Lorsque nous utilisons l'opérateur NOT, nous récupérons uniquement les données de la table qui ne répondent pas aux critères de l'expression donnée.

Nous pouvons utiliser l'opérateur NOT avec l'instruction SELECT, l'instruction UPDATE et l'instruction DELETE. Nous pouvons utiliser l'opérateur NOT avec d'autres opérateurs comme l'opérateur AND, l'opérateur OR, les opérateurs BETWEEN, l'opérateur IN, l'opérateur LIKE et d'autres opérateurs.

Syntaxe de l'opérateur NOT :

SELECT Column_name1, Column_name2, Column_name3 FROM Table_name WHERE Column_name NOT expression;

Le tableau montre le résultat de l'opérateur NOT :

PAS

Vrai

Faux

Faux

Vrai

Nul

Nul

Comprenons le concept d'opérateur SQL NOT à l'aide d'exemples.

Considérez les tables existantes, qui ont les enregistrements suivants :

Tableau 1 :Employés

ID EMPLOYEE

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALAIRE

VILLE

DÉPARTEMENT

ID_GESTION

1001

VAIBHAVI

MISHRA

65500

PUNE

ORACLE

1

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

1003

NIKHIL

VAN

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGAR

ORACLE

1

2002

BHAVESH

JAIN

65500

PUNE

FMW

2

2003

RUCHIKA

JAIN

50000

MUMBAI

C#

5

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4001

RAJESH

GOUD

60500

MUMBAI

TEST

4

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TEST

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGAR

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TEST

4

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

Tableau 2 :Gestionnaire

managerid

manager_name

manager_department

1

Snehdeep Kaur

ORACLE

2

KirtiKirtane

FMW

3

Abhishek Manish

JAVA

4

AnupamMishra

TESTING

5

Akash Kadam

C#

Exemple 1 : Write a query to display the employees' details where the city is NOT Pune.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT CITY = 'PUNE';

We display employees' details where the city should not be 'Pune'. We used the NOT operator followed by the city column in the WHERE clause. The NOT operator means only those employee details to be displayed whose city is not Pune.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

1003

NIKHIL

VANI

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

2003

RUCHIKA

JAIN

50000

MUMBAI

C#

5

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4001

RAJESH

GOUD

60500

MUMBAI

TESTING

4

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TESTING

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see, only those records are displayed where the city is not Pune.

Exemple 2 : Write a query to display the employees’ details where the Department is NOT C#.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT DEPARTMENT = 'C#';

From the above query, we display employees' details where Department should not be 'C#'. Only those employee details to be displayed whose Department is not C#. We used the NOT operator followed by the city column in the WHERE clause.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1001

VAIBHAVI

MISHRA

65500

PUNE

ORACLE

1

1003

NIKHIL

VANI

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

2002

BHAVESH

JAIN

65500

PUNE

FMW

2

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4001

RAJESH

GOUD

60500

MUMBAI

TESTING

4

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TESTING

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see, only those records are displayed where Department is not C#.

Example 3: Write a query to display employee details where the city is not ‘Mumbai’, 'Pune', and ‘Delhi’.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE CITY NOT IN ('PUNE', 'MUMBAI', 'DELHI'); 

From the above query, we display the employees' details where city is not 'Pune', 'Mumbai', and 'Delhi'. We have used IN operator with the NOT operator. NOT IN operator allow only those records whose values are not present in the IN operator parameter.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

1003

NIKHIL

VANI

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see, only those records are displayed where city is not 'Pune', 'Mumbai', and 'Delhi.'

Example 4: Write a query to display employee details where the city is not ‘Mumbai’ or Department is not ‘Oracle’.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT CITY = 'MUMBAI' AND NOT DEPARTMENT = 'ORACLE';

From the above query, we have displayed the employees' details where the city is not 'Mumbai' or Department is not 'Oracle'. The above query excludes all those records whose city is 'Mumbai' and Department is 'Oracle’.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

1003

NIKHIL

VANI

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2002

BHAVESH

JAIN

65500

PUNE

FMW

2

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TESTING

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

As we can see, only those records are displayed where the city is not 'Mumbai' and Department is not 'Oracle'.

Example 5: Write a query to display employee details where the salary is not greater than 60000.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT SALARY > 60000;

From the above query, we displayed the employees' details where salary is not greater than 60000. Here, we didn't use less than the operator. We used NOT operator with greater than the operator.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

1003

NIKHIL

VANI

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

2003

RUCHIKA

JAIN

50000

MUMBAI

C#

5

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3002

ANUJA

WANRE

50500

JAIPUR

FMW

2

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TESTING

4

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

As we can see, only those records are displayed where the salary is not greater than 60000.

Example 6: Write a query to display employees' details where the city is not Bangalore and Department is not FMW or Testing.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT CITY = 'BANGALORE' AND NOT (DEPARTMENT = 'FMW' OR DEPARTMENT = 'TESTING');

From the above query, we displayed the employees' details where the city is not Bangalore, and neither Department is FMW or Testing. Explanation of the above query how actually query works, first the bracket part will get executed i.e.

Step1: (DEPARTMENT =‘FMW’ OR DEPARTMENT =‘TESTING’); the output of this query part is that only employee's details whose Department are either FMW or Testing are selected.

Step 2: WHERE NOT CITY =‘BANGALORE’AND NOT (output of the query); the output of this query part will terminate all those employees' details where the city is Bangalore and output of step 1.

Step 3: SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES; the output of this final query is the records that are left from excluding the records from the above query part.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1001

VAIBHAVI

MISHRA

65500

PUNE

ORACLE

1

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

2003

RUCHIKA

JAIN

50000

MUMBAI

C#

5

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see from the output, only those records are displayed where the city is not 'Bangalore' and Department is not 'FMW', or Department is not 'Testing'.

Example 7: Write a subquery to display employees' details where the manager id is not 2 from the manager table.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT MANAGERID = (SELECT MANAGERID FROM MANAGER WHERE MANAGERID = 2); 

We display the employees' details from the above query where the manager id is not 2. We have used a subquery in the above query.

Explanation of the above query how the actual query works:

Step 1: (SELECT MANAGERID FROM MANAGER WHERE MANAGERID =2);

First, the inner query will get executed. The output of this query is only manager details selected where manager id =2. The output of the query:

Step 2: SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE NOT MANAGERID =2;

2 is the output of the inner query, which will now use as input for the main query to display the final output of the entire query. The output of the above query will be those employees' details where the manager id is not 2 in the employees' Table.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1001

VAIBHAVI

MISHRA

65500

PUNE

ORACLE

1

1002

VAIBHAV

SHARMA

60000

NOIDA

C#

5

2001

PRACHI

SHARMA

55500

CHANDIGARH

ORACLE

1

2003

RUCHIKA

JAIN

50000

MUMBAI

C#

5

3001

PRANOTI

SHENDE

55500

PUNE

JAVA

3

3003

DEEPAM

JAUHARI

58500

MUMBAI

JAVA

3

4001

RAJESH

GOUD

60500

MUMBAI

TESTING

4

4002

ASHWINI

BAGHAT

54500

NOIDA

JAVA

3

4003

RUCHIKA

AGARWAL

60000

DELHI

ORACLE

1

5001

ARCHIT

SHARMA

55500

DELHI

TESTING

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6001

RAHUL

NIKAM

54500

BANGALORE

TESTING

4

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see in the output, only those records are displayed where the manager id is not 2.

Example 8: Write a query to display employee id, first name and last name, the city from the employees' Table, and manager id from the manager table where the city is not 'Hyderabad'.

SELECT E.EMPLOYEEID, CONCAT (E.FIRST_NAME, CONCAT (" ", E.LAST_NAME)) AS NAME, E.CITY, M.MANAGERID FROM EMPLOYEES E INNER JOIN MANAGER M ON E.MANAGERID = M.MANAGERID WHERE NOT E.CITY = 'HYDERABAD';           

We join two tables from the above query and display the employees' details where the city is not 'Hyderabad'. We also did concatenation for First Name and Last Name as Name. And records are displayed in ascending order.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

NAME

CITY

MANAGERID

1001

VAIBHAVI MISHRA

PUNE

1

2001

PRACHI SHARMA

CHANDIGARH

1

4003

RUCHIKA AGARWAL

DELHI

1

1003

NIKHIL VANI

JAIPUR

2

2002

BHAVESH JAIN

PUNE

2

3002

ANUJA WANRE

JAIPUR

2

3001

PRANOTI SHENDE

PUNE

3

3003

DEEPAM JAUHARI

MUMBAI

3

4002

ASHWINI BAGHAT

NOIDA

3

4001

RAJESH GOUD

MUMBAI

4

5001

ARCHIT SHARMA

DELHI

4

6001

RAHUL NIKAM

BANGALORE

4

1002

VAIBHAV SHARMA

NOIDA

5

2003

RUCHIKA JAIN

MUMBAI

5

3003

ROSHAN NEHTE

CHANDIGARH

5

6002

ATISH JADHAV

BANGALORE

5

As we can see in the output, only those records are displayed where the city is not 'Hyderabad'.

Example 9: Write a query to display employees’ details where salary is not between 50000 and 60000.

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE SALARY IS NOT BETWEEN 50000 AND 60000;

The above query displays employees' details where employee salary is not between 50000 and 60000. We used BETWEEN operator with NOT operator to select salary between 50000 and 60000.

The output of the above query:

EMPLOYEEID

FIRST_NAME

LAST_NAME

SALARY

CITY

DEPARTMENT

MANAGERID

1001

VAIBHAVI

MISHRA

65500

PUNE

ORACLE

1

2002

BHAVESH

JAIN

65500

PUNE

FMW

2

4001

RAJESH

GOUD

60500

MUMBAI

TESTING

4

5002

SANKET

CHAUHAN

70000

HYDERABAD

JAVA

3

5003

ROSHAN

NEHTE

48500

CHANDIGARH

C#

5

6002

ATISH

JADHAV

60500

BANGALORE

C#

5

6003

NIKITA

INGALE

65000

HYDERABAD

ORACLE

1

As we can see in the output, only those records are displayed where the salary is not between 50000 and 60000.