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Home/ Questions/Q 7976827
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 4, 20262026-06-04T09:00:54+00:00 2026-06-04T09:00:54+00:00

I have a simple program which initializes an array as: int a[]={10,20,30,40,50}; char *p;

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I have a simple program which initializes an array as:

int a[]={10,20,30,40,50};   
char *p;
p=(char*)a;

Now I want to access the value at each byte through pointer p. For that I need to know: how is the array stored in memory? Is it stored on the stack or the heap?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-04T09:00:56+00:00Added an answer on June 4, 2026 at 9:00 am

    An array stores its elements in contiguous memory locations.
    If You created the array locally it will be on stack. Where the elements are stored depends on the storage specification.
    For Example:
    An array declared globally or statically would have different storage specification from an array declared locally. Technically, the where part is implementation defined but usually implementations would use similar usage patterns.

    • A local array will be (usually) created on stack while
    • A global or static array will be (usually) created on bss/data segments and
    • A dynamically created array will be created on heap.
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