Each type of integer has a different range of storage capacity
Type Capacity
Int16 -- (-32,768 to +32,767)
Int32 -- (-2,147,483,648 to +2,147,483,647)
Int64 -- (-9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to +9,223,372,036,854,775,807)
As stated by James Sutherland in his answer:
int
and Int32
are indeed synonymous; int
will be a little more
familiar looking, Int32
makes the 32-bitness more explicit to those
reading your code. I would be inclined to use int where I just need
'an integer', Int32
where the size is important (cryptographic code,
structures) so future maintainers will know it's safe to enlarge an
int
if appropriate, but should take care changing Int32
variables
in the same way.
The resulting code will be identical: the difference is purely one of
readability or code appearance.
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