You cannot start in something other than main, although there are ways to have some code execute before main.
Putting code in a static initialization block will have the code run prior to main; however, it won't be 100% controllable. while you can be assured it runs prior to main, you cannot specify the order that two static initialization blocks will run prior to them both executing before main.
Linkers and loaders both have the concept of main held as a shared "understood" start of a C / C++ program; however, there is code that runs prior to main. This code is responsible for "setting up the environment" of the program (things like setting up stdin or cin). By putting code in a static initialization block, you effectively say, "hey you need to do this too to have the right environment". Generally, this should be something small, that can stand independently in execution order of other items.
If you need two or three things to execute in order before main, then make them into proper functions and call them at the beginning of main.
check()instead ofmain(). Or you can writemain()so it callscheck(). The latter is several orders of magnitude easier to do. The C standard says (ISO/IEC 9899:2011 §5.12.2.1 Program Startup) The function called at program startup is namedmain. – Jonathan Leffler Nov 14 '12 at 14:46