Your post is not very clear, I can't understand if in the table Topics you have inside also posts in that topic and replies to that topic.
In this case I think that this is not the good way, you should have posts separated from topic data. Let me explain.
A forum is formed by:
// MAIN PAGE, showing avaible forums
// |
// SPECIFIC FORUM, that show the threads (or topics) inside
// |
// POSTS that show part of the post related to that thread.
//
// USER_CP -------------- ADMIN_CP
We need at least 4 tables (I'm not considering admin_cp).
these are:
// TOPICS:
// +---------------+---------+-------------+----------+----------+----------------+
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | TITLE | SUB_TITLE | AUTHOR | CLOSED | PARENT FORUM |
// +---------------+---------+-------------+----------+----------+----------------+
//
// These are very few basic field for the table. No reference about the posts here.
//
//
// FORUMS:
// +---------------+---------+-------------+--------------+
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | TITLE | SUB_TITLE | VISIBILITY |
// +---------------+---------+-------------+--------------+
//
// Almost clear, visibility is a value to determine if the forum is private (such are
// forums like: "Moderator rooms" or "Admin stuff"), protected (i.e. for non registered
// users, or if the forum is public.
//
//
// POSTS:
// +---------------+----------+-------+-----------+--------+---------+-------+- - -
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | TOPIC_ID | TITLE | SUB_TITLE | AUTHOR | MESSAGE | VOTES | ...
// +---------------+----------+-------+-----------+--------+---------+-------+- - -
//
// In Votes you have a integer number (positive o negative, no matter) with the total
// of the votes for this post (not useful if you fully use the table like).
//
// REPLIES
// +---------------+----------+---------+--------+---------+
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | TOPIC_ID | POST_ID | AUTHOR | MESSAGE |
// +---------------+----------+---------+--------+---------+
//
//
// USERS
// +---------------+------+------+------------+------+---------+- - - - -
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | NICK | PASS | PRIVILEGES | NAME | SURNAME | ETC..
// +---------------+------+------+------------+------+---------+- - - - -
//
// Privileges determinate if a user is admin, mod, super_mod or simple user
//
//
// LIKES
// +---------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+---------+------+
// | ID, p.k. a.i. | USER_ID | POST_ID | TOPIC_ID | REPLY_ID | UP_DOWN | DATE |
// +---------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+---------+------+
This is, in my opinion the structure you should use.
home page, show all the forums:
- read the privileges of the user
- read the forums data from the table
WHERE visibility >= user_privileges
- impaginate each forum with proper links.
Forum page, show all the topics (and moderators):
- read the topics from the table
WHERE parent_forum = forum_id
- read moderators of this forum
- impaginate topics with proper links
- shows moderator at the bottom of the page.
Topic page, show all the messages.
- read the topi data from the table.
- the topic is also the first message!
- read the posts from the table
WHERE topic_id = current_topic_id
- for each post read from the table "LIKES"
WHERE post_id = selected_post
- sum all the votes
- impaginate the post in proper pages and proper votes.
User page:
- read all the data,
WHERE id = user_id_that_want
- read from "LIKE"
WHERE user_id = actual_user
- you have all the likes/dislike the user sent. do what you want.
- impaginate
With this table structure you can also use a StackOverflow similar way to consider votes, i.e. UPvotes are 0 for the voter, but downvote are -1 for the voter. For each post, you can read from the like table just using post_id, so you know how many votes have the post (up and down) and with this you can count also up vote +10 to the post creator, downvote -5 to post creator.
Only with an extra table that is likes.
You can have:
- votes on a topic
- votes on a post
- votes on a reply
- votes total (reply+post+topic) of the topic.
When you insert a topic you will add:
user_id
topic_id = topic id
post_id = -1 (this is not a post, is the topic!)
repl
y_id = -1 (as above)
when you insert a post:
user_id
topic_id = current topic
post_id = post_id
reply_id = -1 (this is not a a reply)
when you insert a reply
user_id
topic_id = current topic
post_id = current post
reply_id = the reply id.
This will not have id problem issues. because the three are separated.
If you call for all the answer of a specific topic and a specific post you will add:
WHERE topic_id = current, post_id = current
if you need the reply of a topic, just put post_id = -1
And so on.
No issues with the ids!
I think I have explained almost all. for any question, ask!
EDITED: something here and there