I am trying to create a site where users can register and create a profile, therefore I am using two MySQL tables within a database e.g. users and user_profile.
The users table has an auto increment primary key called user_id.
The user_profile table has the same primary key called user_id however it is not auto increment.
*see note for why I have multiple tables.
When a user signs up, data from the registration form is inserted into users, then the last_insert_id() is input into the user_id field of the user_profile table. I use transactions to ensure this always happens.
My question is, is this bad practice?
Should I have a unique auto increment primary key for the user_profile table, even though one user can only ever have one profile?
Maybe there are other downsides to creating a database like this?
I'd appreciate if anyone can explain why this is a problem or if it's fine, I'd like to make sure my database is as efficient as possible.
Note: I am using seperate tables for user and user_profile because user_profile contains fields that are potentially null and also will be requested much more than the user table, due to the data being displayed on a public profile.
Maybe this is also bad practice and they should be lumped in one table?
last_insert_id(). – Lightness Races in Orbit Sep 13 '11 at 13:16