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Home/ Questions/Q 282415
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:17:13+00:00 2026-05-12T05:17:13+00:00

I have found a few threads in regards to this issue. Most people appear

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I have found a few threads in regards to this issue. Most people appear to favor using int in their c# code accross the board even if a byte or smallint would handle the data unless it is a mobile app. I don’t understand why. Doesn’t it make more sense to define your C# datatype as the same datatype that would be in your data storage solution?

My Premise:
If I am using a typed dataset, Linq2SQL classes, POCO, one way or another I will run into compiler datatype conversion issues if I don’t keep my datatypes in sync across my tiers. I don’t really like doing System.Convert all the time just because it was easier to use int accross the board in c# code. I have always used whatever the smallest datatype is needed to handle the data in the database as well as in code, to keep my interface to the database clean. So I would bet 75% of my C# code is using byte or short as opposed to int, because that is what is in the database.

Possibilities:
Does this mean that most people who just use int for everything in code also use the int datatype for their sql storage datatypes and could care less about the overall size of their database, or do they do system.convert in code wherever applicable?

Why I care: I have worked on my own forever and I just want to be familiar with best practices and standard coding conventions.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:17:13+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:17 am

    Performance-wise, an int is faster in almost all cases. The CPU is designed to work efficiently with 32-bit values.

    Shorter values are complicated to deal with. To read a single byte, say, the CPU has to read the 32-bit block that contains it, and then mask out the upper 24 bits.

    To write a byte, it has to read the destination 32-bit block, overwrite the lower 8 bits with the desired byte value, and write the entire 32-bit block back again.

    Space-wise, of course, you save a few bytes by using smaller datatypes. So if you’re building a table with a few million rows, then shorter datatypes may be worth considering. (And the same might be good reason why you should use smaller datatypes in your database)

    And correctness-wise, an int doesn’t overflow easily. What if you think your value is going to fit within a byte, and then at some point in the future some harmless-looking change to the code means larger values get stored into it?

    Those are some of the reasons why int should be your default datatype for all integral data. Only use byte if you actually want to store machine bytes. Only use shorts if you’re dealing with a file format or protocol or similar that actually specifies 16-bit integer values. If you’re just dealing with integers in general, make them ints.

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