@LuchianGrigore Well, the question wasn't very well received (-4 and counting :), but I did the digging and here's what I came up with: stackoverflow.com/a/15800049/140264
Luchian, I have never found a reference to static allocation that talks about it the way you do. I want to be convinced! I know you wouldn't be so adamant otherwise.
have a problem with this statement but I understand what you mean, what I'm trying to get at is that the space for x hasn't been allocated there, only what the value in the previously allocated space was changed
:) ok, let's decompile. You probably have more experience doing that, but the instructions will be a conclusive decision one way or the other. (I've never decompiled and inspected a program's code like this before, but I'm game.)
Are you saying that a) memory for function variables is allocated in the executable for each function and b) memory that is allocated in the executable itself is then freed during execution?
@LuchianGrigore I must be confused. The page you linked to specifically said that the memory would be allocated at compile time. Are you saying that int x[10]; when declared in a function block would be allocated at compile time and freed on scope exit?