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Home/ Questions/Q 1104267
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T01:27:34+00:00 2026-05-17T01:27:34+00:00

Why is a bit, called a bit. Why is a 8-bits a Byte? What

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Why is a bit, called a bit. Why is a 8-bits a Byte? What made people call a 16-bits a Word, and so on. Where and why did their alias come about?

I would love other people to include things like basic ASM types, then branch out to C/C++ and move on to SQL and the like’s datatypes.

  1. 1-Bit
    1. Bit – binary Unit
    2. Bool – Named after the inventor of boolen logic George Boole.
  2. 4-Bits
    1. Nibble – Half the size of bite/byte.
  3. 8-Bits
    1. Byte – Coined from “bite” but respelled to avoid accidental mutation to “bit”.
    2. Char
    3. Octet – Is a grouping of eight bits, from the Latin “octo” meaning “eight”.
  4. 16-Bits
    1. Word (unsigned integer)
    2. short (signed integer)
  5. 32-Bits
    1. Double Word
    2. int (signed integers)
    3. unsigned (unsigned integer)
    4. float (4-byte float)
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T01:27:35+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 1:27 am

    Wikipedia is your friend:

    • bit
    • nibble
    • byte
    • “char” is just short for “character”
    • “short” is an alias for “short int”
    • word “is the native or most efficient size the CPU can handle” (thanks to Tony for pointing that out).
    • “int” is short for “integer”. The size is undefined (can be 16, 32 or 64 bits).
    • “float” is short for “floating point number”
    • “double” is short for “double precision floating point number”
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