I noticed that it is, despite being disputed and disproven in many SO answers, a widespread misunderstanding that heap memory is generally slower than stack memory; I presumed "historical" reasons for this to exist.
Thus I posted
which promptly got closed as primarily opinion-based, though my question explicitly states:
So: was there some particular instruction set/architecture, some RISC compiler, or some cache hierarchy that led to that myth being formed?
which, in my humble opinion, is a very fact-oriented question: Where does that piece of information come from?
Now, having voted to close a lot of questions myself, I know there's not always a perfect match in the predefined closing reasons for every question. So:
- am I plain wrong here, and my question is primarily opinion-based (and thus, why? I tried to back my claim with citations/illustrative examples), or
- was this a case of "this question doesn't belong on SO, so let's pick the closest closing reason", because historical questions are kind of off-topic, or
- was this closing unwarranted?