Your table structure is chosen when maximum data flexibility in preferred. The disadvantage of this structure is that efficiency is compromised, the table typically suffers from being very bloated with data, and querying the table usually involved aggregate functions using a technique called a "pivot".
Here is how you can use a pivot to perform your query: (db-fiddle demo)
SELECT user_id
FROM wp_usermeta
GROUP BY user_id
HAVING MAX(IF(meta_key = 'first_name', meta_value, NULL)) = 'mangesh'
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'yearofpassing', meta_value, NULL)) = '2013'
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'u_city', meta_value, NULL)) = 'n/a'
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'us_course', meta_value, NULL)) = 'programming'
Effectively, the whole table gets grouped by the user_id
column. In doing so, there is an interim one-to-many relationship formed. In other words, each respective user_id
will have one-or-more-rows-worth of data (non-linear, not flat) which can be interrogated by MySQL's aggregate functions (e.g. MAX()
).
The HAVING clause is where the filter logic must go after a GROUP BY (WHERE filtration occurs before GROUP BY). Within the "clusters of data", you can isolate data by checking its meta_key
. When you find a row that matches the meta_key
, you use its meta_value
, if not you assign a differentiating default value. After all rows in the aggregate have been processed by the IF
, you know that the row that you are looking for is the non-NULL value -- this is accessed by calling MAX()
. Use this max value to compare against the actual value that you are filtering for. Repeat this filter as much as needed to satisfy your business logic.
I should state, also, that you are not using secure coding practices. mysql_query()
is currently deprecated and should not exist in any currently live code for any reason. I recommend that you use mysqli's object oriented syntax and implement a prepared statement with bound parameters for security/stability.
$sql = "SELECT user_id
FROM wp_usermeta
GROUP BY user_id
HAVING MAX(IF(meta_key = 'first_name', meta_value, NULL)) = ?
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'yearofpassing', meta_value, NULL)) = ?
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'u_city', meta_value, NULL)) = ?
AND MAX(IF(meta_key = 'us_course', meta_value, NULL)) = ?";
$stmt = $conn->prepare($sql);
$stmt->bind_param('ssss', $us_name, $us_yearselect, $us_reg, $us_course);
$stmt->execute();
$stmt->store_result();
$stmt->bind_result($user_id);
$stmt->fetch();
echo $user_id;
meta_key
) to have multiple different values at the same time? Please, don't usemysql_*
functions in new code. They are no longer maintained and are officially deprecated. See the red box? Learn about prepared statements instead, and use PDO or MySQLi - this article will help you decide which. If you choose PDO, here is a good tutorial.