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I've been wondering this for a long time since I've never had "formal" education on computer science (I'm in highschool), so please excuse my ignorance on the subject.

On a platform that supports the three types of integers listed in the title, which one's better and why? (I know that every kind of int has a different length in memory, but I'm not sure what that means or how it affects performance or, from a developer's view point, which one has more advantages over the other).

Thank you in advance for your help.

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    You should read the book "CODE" by Charles Petzold. Jan 22, 2013 at 17:59
  • @DourHighArch thanks for that recommendation. Am a business student and I really needed to know this since am interested in low level programming .
    – 0.sh
    Dec 19, 2018 at 6:20

5 Answers 5

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"Better" is a subjective term, but some integers are more performant on certain platforms.

For example, in a 32-bit computer (referenced by terms like 32-bit platform and Win32) the CPU is optimized to handle a 32-bit value at a time, and the 32 refers to the number of bits that the CPU can consume or produce in a single cycle. (This is a really simplistic explanation, but it gets the general idea across).

In a 64-bit computer (most recent AMD and Intel processors fall into this category), the CPU is optimized to handle 64-bit values at a time.

So, on a 32-bit platform, a 16-bit integer loaded into a 32-bit address would need to have 16 bits zeroed out so that the CPU could operate on it; a 32-bit integer would be immediately usable without any alteration, and a 64-bit integer would need to be operated on in two or more CPU cycles (once for the low 32-bits, and then again for the high 32-bits).

Conversely, on a 64-bit platform, 16-bit integers would need to have 48 bits zeroed, 32-bit integers would need to have 32 bits zeroed, and 64-bit integers could be operated on immediately.

Each platform and CPU has a 'native' bit-ness (like 32 or 64), and this usually limits some of the other resources that can be accessed by that CPU (for example, the 3GB/4GB memory limitation of 32-bit processors). The 80386 processor family (and later x86) processors made 32-bit the norm, but now companies like AMD and then Intel are currently making 64-bit the norm.

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  • For completeness you should add the obvious and mention the different minimal and maximal values. Also you say bits need to be zeroed out, does that imply the use of a 16 bit int on a 32 bit system is slower than the use of 32 bit ints? May 17, 2016 at 8:00
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    So, does using a smaller integer than the native word size have a negative performance impact? Or is it just no faster than the native word size?
    – geon
    Nov 2, 2018 at 9:55
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To answer your first question, the usage of a 16 bit vs a 32 bit vs a 64 bit integer depends on the context that it is used. Therefore, you really can't say one is better over the other, per say. However, depending on a situation, using one over another is preferable. Consider this example. Let's say you have a database with 10 million users and you want to store the year they were born. If you create a field in your database with a 64 bit integer then you have exhausted 80 megabytes of your storage; whereas, if you were to use a 16 bit field, only 20 megabytes of your storage will get used. You can use a 16 bit field here because the year people are born is smaller than the largest 16 bit number. In other words 1980, 1990, 1991 < 65535, assuming your field is unsigned. All in all, it depends on the context. I hope this helps.

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  • The database space usage depends on the database it is not true for Oracle, only the number of bytes needed to express the number will be used. Mar 17, 2015 at 11:11
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A simple answer is to use the smallest one you KNOW will be safe for the range of possible values it will contain.

If you know the possible values are constrained to be smaller than a maximum-length 16-bit integer (e.g. the value corresponding to what day of the year it is - always <= 366) then use that. If you aren't sure (e.g. the record ID of a table in a database that can have any number of rows) then use Int32 or Int64 depending on your judgment.

Other can probably give you a better sense of of the performance advantages depending on what programming language you are using, but the smaller types use less memory and hence are 'better' to use if you don't need larger.

Just for reference, a 16-bit integer means there are 2^16 possible values - generally represented as between 0 and 65,535. 32-bit values range from 0 to 2^32 - 1, or just over 4.29 billion values.

This question On 32-bit CPUs, is an 'integer' type more efficient than a 'short' type? may add some more good information.

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It depends on whether speed or storage should be optimized. If you are interested in speed and you are running SQL Server in 64 bit mode then 64 bit keys are what you need. A 64 bit processor running in 64 bit mode, is optimized to use 64 bit numbers and addresses. Likewise, a 64 bit processor running in 32 bit mode is optimized to use 32 bit numbers and addresses. For example, in 64 bit mode, all pushes and pops onto the stack are 8 bytes etc. Also fetch from cache and memory are again optimized for 64 bit numbers and addresses. The processor, running in 64 bit mode, may need more machine cycles to handle a 32 bit number just like a processor, running in 32 bit mode needs more machine cycles to handle a 16 bit number. The increases in processing time come for many reasons, but just think about the example of memory alignment: The 32 bit number may not be aligned on a 64 bit integral boundary which means loading the number requires shifting and masking the number after loading it into a register. At the very least, every 32 bit number must be masked before each operation. We are talking at least halving the processor's effective speed while handling 32 or 16 bit integers in 64 bit mode.

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To provide a simple explanation to novice programmers. A bit is either a 0 or a 1.

  • a 16 bit Int is an integer represented by a string of 16 bits (16 0's and 1's)
  • a 32 bit Int is an integer represented by a string of 32 bits (32 0's and 1's)
  • a 64 bit Int is an integer represented by a string of 64 bits (64 0's and 1's)

Examples to drive those concepts home:

  • an example of a 16-bit integer would be 0000000000000110 which equals the int 6
  • an example of a 32-bit integer would be 00000000000000000100001000100110 which equals the int 16934.
  • an example of a 64-bit integer would be 0000100010000000010000100010011000000000000000000100001000100110 which equals the int 612562280298594854.

You can represent a larger number of integers with 64 bits than you can 32 bits than you can 16 bits. So the benefit of using fewer bits is you save space on the machine. The benefit of using more bits is you can represent more integers.

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