That is no assignment, but an initializer. Local static
variables are only initialized once at program startup like global variables. They keep their last assigned value even between invocations of the function. Thus after your first call, it retains the value 11
. In fact, they are like file-scope static
variables, with their name only known in the scope of the block they are declared (but you can pass them by pointer).
Drawback is they only exist once. If you invoke the same function from multiple threads, they all share the same variable.
Try a third call: you will get 12
.
Note: the initializer must be a constant expression. Try static int s = 10, t = s + 5;
and read the compiler error message.