I heard that variables are stored in stack and objects are stored in heap.
If i declare variable as var password= "abc".Now where this password is going to store(heap /stack)
variables are always stored on stack. if variable has type of some reference type, then it 'points' to the object which is stored on the heap (i.e. it stores something like an address of object). if variable has type of value type, then it stores value itself, on the stack
Strings, like all reference types, are always on the heap. Value types can be on the stack or on the heap, depending on context. See stackoverflow.com/a/4853251/34092
@GianPaolo I do understand that reference type can have fields of value type, and I'm able to draw how this looks like. variables are at the left side of picture
@InBetween closure is a reference type - it's an instance of anonymous class which have fields for captured local variables
@InBetween again, we are talking about variables here (see the caption of the question). Do you have some link which says that variable itself is stored on heap?
@mjwills yes, I have already read that before. as far as I understand, the variables are things which are reserved with .locals init instruction at the begining of method call. How can we store variable on heap? as far as I know with boxing and other stuff we still need to unbox and assign copy of value to the variable of value type
Is there some official documentation or something to read that we can read to learn more about that @SergeyBerezovskiy ? Also, what did you mean by if variable has type of value type, then it stores value itself, on the stack? That seems to contradict blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/ericlippert/2010/09/30/… .
@mjwills well, that is what I would like to understand :) Is it possible to have an integer variable on stack which will contain reference to integer value on heap instead of holding just value? As far as I know it is not possible - variable of Int32 type will hold a copy of value which can be stored on the stack, on the heap, or maybe in registers.
Found C# spec part "Variables of value types directly contain their data whereas variables of reference types store references to their data, the latter being known as objects. "