Recently I've learned that every computation cycle performs on machine words which on most contemporary processors and OS'es are either 32-bit or 64-bit. So what are the benefits of using the smaller bit-size values like Int16, Int8, Word8? What are they exactly for? Is it storage reduction only?
I write a complex calculation program which consists of several modules but is interfaced by only a single function which returns a Word64 value, so the whole program results in Word64 value. I'm interested in the answer to this question because inside this program I found myself utilizing a lot of different Integral types like Word16 and Word8 to represent small entities, and seeing that they quite often got converted with fromIntegral got me thinking: was I making a mistake there and what was the exact benefit of those types which I not knowing about got blindly attracted by? Did it make sense at all to utilize other integral types and evetually convert them with fromIntegral or maybe I should have just used Word64 everywhere?
