<p>Table: <code>Employee</code></p> <pre> +--------------+---------+ | Column Name | Type | +--------------+---------+ | id | int | | name | varchar | | salary | int | | departmentId | int | +--------------+---------+ id is the primary key column for this table. departmentId is a foreign key of the ID from the <code>Department </code>table. Each row of this table indicates the ID, name, and salary of an employee. It also contains the ID of their department. </pre> <p> </p> <p>Table: <code>Department</code></p> <pre> +-------------+---------+ | Column Name | Type | +-------------+---------+ | id | int | | name | varchar | +-------------+---------+ id is the primary key column for this table. Each row of this table indicates the ID of a department and its name. </pre> <p> </p> <p>Write an SQL query to find employees who have the highest salary in each of the departments.</p> <p>Return the result table in <strong>any order</strong>.</p> <p>The query result format is in the following example.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Example 1:</strong></p> <pre> <strong>Input:</strong> Employee table: +----+-------+--------+--------------+ | id | name | salary | departmentId | +----+-------+--------+--------------+ | 1 | Joe | 70000 | 1 | | 2 | Jim | 90000 | 1 | | 3 | Henry | 80000 | 2 | | 4 | Sam | 60000 | 2 | | 5 | Max | 90000 | 1 | +----+-------+--------+--------------+ Department table: +----+-------+ | id | name | +----+-------+ | 1 | IT | | 2 | Sales | +----+-------+ <strong>Output:</strong> +------------+----------+--------+ | Department | Employee | Salary | +------------+----------+--------+ | IT | Jim | 90000 | | Sales | Henry | 80000 | | IT | Max | 90000 | +------------+----------+--------+ <strong>Explanation:</strong> Max and Jim both have the highest salary in the IT department and Henry has the highest salary in the Sales department. </pre>