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Home/ Questions/Q 3320208
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T22:54:58+00:00 2026-05-17T22:54:58+00:00

I’m doing some maintenance work on a database application and I’ve discovered that, joy

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I’m doing some maintenance work on a database application and I’ve discovered that, joy of joys, even though values from one table are being used in the style of foreign keys, there’s no foreign key constraints on the tables.

I’m trying to add FK constraints on these columns, but I’m finding that, because there’s already a whole load of bad data in the tables from previous errors which have been naively corrected, I need to find the rows which don’t match up to the other table and then delete them.

I’ve found some examples of this kind of query on the web, but they all seem to provide examples rather than explanations, and I don’t understand why they work.

Can someone explain to me how to construct a query which returns all the rows with no matches in another table, and what it’s doing, so that I can make these queries myself, rather than coming running to SO for every table in this mess that has no FK constraints?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T22:54:58+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 10:54 pm

    Here’s a simple query:

    SELECT t1.ID
    FROM Table1 t1
        LEFT JOIN Table2 t2 ON t1.ID = t2.ID
    WHERE t2.ID IS NULL
    

    The key points are:

    1. LEFT JOIN is used; this will return ALL rows from Table1, regardless of whether or not there is a matching row in Table2.

    2. The WHERE t2.ID IS NULL clause; this will restrict the results returned to only those rows where the ID returned from Table2 is null – in other words there is NO record in Table2 for that particular ID from Table1. Table2.ID will be returned as NULL for all records from Table1 where the ID is not matched in Table2.

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