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Home/ Questions/Q 649977
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T22:00:11+00:00 2026-05-13T22:00:11+00:00

the title might be a little bit confusing, let me explain, ;) I have

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the title might be a little bit confusing, let me explain, 😉
I have 3 tables:

[names]
n_id;name
1;Jeff
2;Adam

[books]
b_id;title
1;Book1
2;Book2

[read]
n_id;b_id

The table [read] is a table with read books.
if Adam reads “Book1” the item in [read] looks like this:

2;1

so far, so good.
Now, is there a way to know which books werent read by a person?
We know that only Adam read a book “Book1”, so the query should output something like this:

n_id;name;b_id;title
1;Jeff;1;Book1
1;Jeff;2;Book2
2;Adam;2;Book2

is it possible to do this in 1 query or do I need some scripting?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T22:00:11+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:00 pm

    You can use a CROSS JOIN to get all possible combinations of names and books and then use a LEFT JOIN on read with IS NULL to remove rows that exist there.

    The LEFT JOIN returns NULL for all joined columns where no rows exist, so checking if r.n_id IS NULL removes those rows where the join actually found rows in read.

    SELECT n.n_id, n.name, b.b_id, b.title
    FROM names n
    CROSS JOIN books b
    LEFT JOIN read r ON ( r.n_id = n.n_id AND r.b_id = b.b_id )
    WHERE r.n_id IS NULL
    
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