Scalars and PODS *don't have lifetimes* apart from the storage in which they are contained. What matters for purposes of aliasing isn't the content of the storage in question, but rather existence of active references to it. Consider the function:
void test1(float *fp, int *ip, int mode)
{
*fp = 1.0f;
*ip = 1.0f;
if (mode)
*fp = 1.0f;
}
By my understanding of dynamic type rules, compilers would be required to perform the integer store last if mode==0, or the float store last if mode==1.