Why would anyone distribute an entity (for example user) into multiple tables by doing something like:
user(user_id, username)
user_tel(user_id, tel_no)
user_addr(user_id, addr)
user_details(user_id, details)
Is there any speed-up bonus you get from this DB design? It's highly counter-intuitive, because it would seem that performing chained joins to retrieve data sounds immeasurably worse than using select projection..
Of course, if one performs other queries by making use only of the user_id and username, that's a speed-up, but is it worth it? So, where is the real advantage and what could be a compatible working scenario that's fit for such a DB design strategy?
LATER EDIT: in the details of this post, please assume a complete, unique entity, whose attributes do not vary in quantity (e.g. a car has only one color, not two, a user has only one username/social sec number/matriculation number/home address/email/etc.. that is, we're not dealing with a one to many relation, but with a 1-to-1, completely consistent description of an entity. In the example above, this is just the case where a single table has been "split" into as many tables as non-primary key columns it had.