Interview Questions Answers.ORG
Interviewer And Interviewee Guide
Interviews
Quizzes
Home
Quizzes
Interviews Dot Net Technologies Interviews:.Net Architecture.Net Database.Net Deployment.NET web servicesADO.NETADO.NET 2.0ASP ProgrammingASP.NetASP.NET 2.0ASP.NET CachingASP.Net MVCBizTalkC# (Sharp) Programming LanguageCOM+Crystal ReportsDataGrid (Grid view)Dot NetDot Net AssemblyDot Net Code SecurityDot NET crystal reportsDot Net FrameworkDot Net RemotingDot Net WindowsFormsEntity FrameworkMicrosoft .Net MobileMicrosoft BasicsMicrosoft.NETMicrosoft.NET 2.0Mixed MicrosoftMono FrameworkMOSSMSFMTSReporting ServicesSenior .Net DeveloperVB .NetVB .Net DeveloperVB.NET FrameworkWCF (Windows Communication Foundation)WCF Data ServicesWeb Forms
Copyright © 2018. All Rights Reserved
ASP Programming Interview Question:
Can I avoid using the garbage collected heap?
Submitted by: AdministratorAd
All languages that target the runtime allow you to allocate class objects from the garbage-collected heap. This brings benefits in terms of fast allocation, and avoids the need for programmers to work out when they should explicitly 'free' each object.
The CLR also provides What are called ValueTypes-these are like classes, except that ValueType objects are allocated on the runtime stack (rather than the heap), and therefore reclaimed automatically when your code exits the procedure in which they are defined. This is how "structs" in C# operate.
Managed Extensions to C++ lets you choose where class objects are allocated. If declared as managed Classes, with the __gc keyword, then they are allocated from the garbage-collected heap. If they don't include the __gc keyword, they behave like regular C++ objects, allocated from the C++ heap, and freed explicitly with the "free" method.
Submitted by: Administrator
The CLR also provides What are called ValueTypes-these are like classes, except that ValueType objects are allocated on the runtime stack (rather than the heap), and therefore reclaimed automatically when your code exits the procedure in which they are defined. This is how "structs" in C# operate.
Managed Extensions to C++ lets you choose where class objects are allocated. If declared as managed Classes, with the __gc keyword, then they are allocated from the garbage-collected heap. If they don't include the __gc keyword, they behave like regular C++ objects, allocated from the C++ heap, and freed explicitly with the "free" method.
Submitted by: Administrator
Copyright 2007-2025 by Interview Questions Answers .ORG All Rights Reserved.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.

https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.
