no we cant..
coz when we do say int *p=4000;
its fine till now.. and if we do *p=10; it is segmentation fault..

On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 10:35 PM, rShetty <rajeevr...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Usually when I declare a variable it will be stored in memory location
> with some address .
> Such as  consider I declare int x=10 , it will stored in some address
> 1003 (say).
> Now my question is can I control the address being assigned to a
> variable in C . Say, I want to store x in address in 4000 and not in
> 1003 defined by the compiler .(Usually this can be done in assembly).
> Can I do that ? Correct me If i am wrong
>
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