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Fields of class, are they stored in the stack or heap?

I was reading some article about Stack vs Heap (just to refresh my knowledge).

Far as I know, if I create a value type inside a reference type (a class), the value type will also be stored in the Heap. Because where the value type being store is depends on where its created.

But then, when we create our application (say WPF/Silverlight), when we create our UserControl, ViewModel, isn't they are also a class (an object) a reference type?

So I kind of wonder, so no matter what I creates inside the UserControl and ViewModel will also be in Heap?

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  • Only value types can be stored on the stack. Since the objects you mention aren't value types, they will always be stored on the heap.
    – Gabe
    Sep 5, 2012 at 20:31
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    Who even cares? You should not mind such implementation details anyway...
    – brunnerh
    Sep 5, 2012 at 20:31
  • @H.B. I just kind of throught of the interview question I got ask before about Heap vs Stack... I really wonder why people will ask that...
    – King Chan
    Sep 5, 2012 at 20:47
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    @KingChan I think the best answer to any interview question about stack vs. heap, if it's for a .NET job, is to discuss why it doesn't matter, and the real issue is copy semantics. That really shows you know what you're talking about, since stack and heap don't matter for .NET. Sep 5, 2012 at 20:49
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    @KingChan Just realize, too, that many interviewers don't know that it's a bad question, and will argue with you. That's probably a bad sign about the job, though ;) Sep 5, 2012 at 20:53

2 Answers 2

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So I kind of wonder, so no matter what I creates inside the UserControl and ViewModel will also be in Heap?

Yes, this is true. The UserControl is a class, so the memory for it, and any variables within it, it will be stored on the heap.

There are two things here:

  1. This is purely an implementation detail. It doesn't/shouldn't really matter where the memory is stored. The usage semantics are all that really matter (ie: passing into a method just copies the reference, not the entire object, etc)
  2. The variable values may get copied into the stack as you use them. For details, see this (very detailed) answer by Eric Lippert detailing what happens with fields stored within a class.
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  • That's really detail lol Now I wonder when will we ever stores things in Stack... I mean like almost every desktop application has to create a (Form/UserControl) and do things inside, so is like everything is in heap...
    – King Chan
    Sep 5, 2012 at 20:50
  • @KingChan It's better to not think about stack and heap at all - but yes, in general, most memory usage is in the heap. The stack, by default, will only be 1mb - but most programs use far more than 1mb of ram :) Sep 5, 2012 at 20:51
  • @KingChan When you're really storing data, it's almost always on the heap (which is why the heap is rather large and that stack quite small). Most of what the stack has are short lived local variables. You will create lots of them in almost every program you make. If nothing else, the stack will have lots of references to storage locations on the heap in your programs.
    – Servy
    Sep 5, 2012 at 20:57
  • Little shame that I just learnt Stack is 1mb by default :)
    – King Chan
    Sep 5, 2012 at 21:03
  • @KingChan It's configurable - and even smaller in asp.net (256kb by default)... Each thread gets its own stack allocation of that amount. Sep 5, 2012 at 21:07
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Yes, the class for the UserControl, and all the property values it contains (even though many of those are value types), will be stored on the heap.

Don't worry too much about stack vs heap. It's usually sufficient to know the following:

  • objects stored on the stack (including references to objects on the heap, which are IntPtr value types) are limited in scope and lifetime to the layer of the call stack for which the stack frame was created.
  • objects stored on the heap are limited in scope and lifetime to that of any reference to that object on the stack or heap.

Now go code :)

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