Last ( silly? ) question.
What is the point then of the EFS lens? What benefit do I get by having them?
It's not a silly question at all, and there are lots of benefits.
Basically, at shortish focal lengths it is optically quite hard to get a lens to project a large enough image circle to cover a full frame sensor. That is the point behind the advice above not to get a 17-40L for a crop format camera.
When designers are released from the constraints of full frame and only have to cover the smaller crop format sensor, they can do much more. Take the 17-40L for example, which is about as good as it gets for full frame. Compare that spec to the EF-S 17-55 which not only has significantly greater range, but is a whole stop faster at f/2.8 vs f/4 (that is quite a big deal optically) and it also has IS. It is a bit more expensive, but it is also exceptionally sharp. No full frame lens can get down to 10mm focal length at all, yet crop format specific lenses do it easily.
There are loads of similar examples in the wide to semi-wide range but the optical benefits quickly run out above 50-60mm which is why there are no EF-S lenses from Canon that start at longer than this, and likewise no Nikon DX either.
In a nutshell, if you fit a wide or standard-ish focal length EF/FX lens to a crop format camera, you will have a restricted spec and will also be paying for format coverage that you can never use.
Some people say don't buy crop format lenses because you won't be able to use them on full frame, but that is poor advice IMHO. Because:
a) while shooting on crop format you are not making the most of your money,
b) most people never move to full frame anyway,
c) if you do change then your EF lenses will behave completely differently so you'll have to replace them anyway to get the field of view you want back,
d) you can sell on good quality branded lenses on here very easily for good money. In fact if you buy used in the first place, you might well lose nothing. Certainly the price is small compared to what you'll get for your old camera, plus the high cost of buying a new full framer.