I have table 1 with a primary key user_id
and table 2 where user_id
is a foreign key.
Only 1 record per user_id
can exist in table
Yes, you can do this (and you should, from a database design point of view).
However, consider what it means if user_id
is the primary key on table 2. You are in effect saying that each row in table 2 corresponds to a user, but you already have a table where each row corresponds to a user: table 1. This raises the question "why then don't you put all data of table 2 into nullable columns in table 1?". After all, having two tables means you will have to make two queries to get this data instead of one.
Now there are some scenarios where this practice might be a good idea:
It can be a good idea, but it depends on the particulars of your application.