You are given three tables: Students, Friends and Packages. Students contains two columns: ID and Name. Friends contains two columns: ID and Friend_ID (ID of the ONLY best friend). Packages contains two columns: ID and Salary (offered salary in $ thousands per month).
Write a query to output the names of those students whose best friends got offered a higher salary than them. Names must be ordered by the salary amount offered to the best friends. It is guaranteed that no two students got same salary offer.
Sample Input
Sample Output
Samantha Julia Scarlet
Explanation
See the following table:
Now,
- Samantha's best friend got offered a higher salary than her at 11.55
- Julia's best friend got offered a higher salary than her at 12.12
- Scarlet's best friend got offered a higher salary than her at 15.2
- Ashley's best friend did NOT get offered a higher salary than her
The name output, when ordered by the salary offered to their friends, will be:
- Samantha
- Julia
- Scarlet
SELECT S.NAME
FROM STUDENTS AS S
JOIN PACKAGES AS P ON S.ID = P.ID
JOIN FRIENDS AS F ON S.ID = F.ID
JOIN PACKAGES AS FP ON F.FRIEND_ID = FP.ID
WHERE P.SALARY < FP.SALARY
ORDER BY FP.SALARY;
'Algorithm > SQL' 카테고리의 다른 글
[SQL][HackerRank] The PADS (0) | 2020.06.11 |
---|---|
[SQL][HackerRank] Type of Triangle (0) | 2020.06.11 |
[SQL][HackerRank] Contest Leaderboard (0) | 2020.06.11 |
[SQL][HackerRank] Weather Observation Station 20 (0) | 2020.06.10 |
[SQL][HackerRank] Weather Observation Station 19 (0) | 2020.06.10 |