*. h or *. hpp for your C++ headers class definitions [closed] I've always used a * h file for my class definitions, but after reading some boost library code, I realised they all use * hpp I've always had an aversion to that file extension, I think mainly be
c - What mean file with extension h. in? - Stack Overflow Typically, a h in file is a header template that is filled in to become the actual header by a configure script based on the outcome of several tests for features present on the target platform
c++ - #include in . h or . c . cpp? - Stack Overflow #ifndef MY_HEADER_H #define MY_HEADER_H #include <stdio h> void doStuffWith(FILE *f); need the definition of FILE from stdio h #endif If header A depends on header B such as the example above, then header A should include header B directly Do NOT try to order your includes in the c file to satisfy dependencies (that is, including header B before header A); that is a big ol' pile of
. c vs . cc vs. . cpp vs . hpp vs . h vs . cxx - Stack Overflow Possible Duplicates: * h or * hpp for your class definitions What is the difference between cc and cpp file suffix? I used to think that it used to be that: h files are header files for C and C