Custom precompiled headers causing compile errors - c++

I am trying to introduce precompiled headers into my project because of long compile times in my project right now. I have a main project that includes a main function and all the real code is in the DLL project(they are linked together.) I named my precompiled header "vpch.h" and i created a vpch.cpp that includes vpch.h. I am using visual studio 2017 so I went into the properties of vpch.cpp and selected Create. Then I added vpch.h as the first thing in all my cpp files. All files are set to use precompiled headers and reference vpch.h Every CPP files throws the error:
Error C1010 unexpected end of file while looking for precompiled header.
Did you forget to add '#include "vpch.h"' to your source?
I am at a loss as to what to do because I have followed many tutorials and can't find a reason for this. As well as most issues that pop up on google are people just accidentally including precompiled headers.
My only thought is that maybe in the section in properties where it asks for the name of the precompiled header, I need to do more than put "vpch.h" and maybe an exact file location? Any help with this is super appreciated.
EDIT
From further debugging it would appear that all but ONE cpp file is throwing an error. The one that doesn't throw an error is the one that exists in the same exact folder as the vpch.h. So files that can't just write #include "vpch.h" and have to write something like "../vpch.h" I can write #include <vpch.h> and I am going to try that now but I am unsure that will help.

The issue was with every CPP file that wasnt in the same folder as the precompiled header.
So if you use a file structure that contains different classes in different folders, using
#include "../../vpch.h" will actually fail. You must add the root folder to your additional include directories and then use #include <vpch.h> for all files. I can NOT tell you why using #include "../../vpch.h" wasn't working. It seems counter intuitive for it to fail in my opinion.
It may be because it searches for the precompiled header in the same folder as the file you are referencing it in. This answer, however, will work as a solution.

Related

stdafx.h does not exist in new New Project Wizard (VS)

cannot open source file stdafx.h or <stdafx.h>
Yes I understand what precompiled headers are
I have been struggling the past hour trying to get a precompiled header stdafx.h to my project as I'm getting the error:
"cannot open source file "stdafx.h".
I tried the Precompiled Header list under Project/Properties and tried making a new temporary project that other suggestions say to just copy from there, but the only ones I see come in <iostream> instead
I've read every other solution here and I'm frustrated why its still not working.
In my header file, it says its using stdafx.h, and I tried both "don't use a precompiled header" and the one I've been suggested through guides. Just want my stdafx.h in my code to work.
Followed past posts here in the past(latest 2016)
changed precompiled header list and tested/messed with the options following suggestions
Tried creating a temporary file pulling the header from there, it wasn't there.

How do I fix unexpected end of file error with pch.h

So I have been trying to learn cpp and I was writing a program, and when I try to build the solution, it gives an error saying
unexpected end of file while looking for precompiled header. Did you forget to add #include "pch.h" to your source?
Then I included it and I got the same error, and also another saying
cannot open source file pch.h
One option, if you are new to c++, is to just turn off pre-compiled headers in the project settings.
It needs to be the first include, you can't place it under other includes.
Your .cpp file is probably not in the same directory as pch.h
Try adding the directory that your pch.h is in to the additional includes, even if it is at the root of your project.
quick solution to a frustrating issue when trying to add .pch to an exisiting project:
if you have a /include /src dir structure, it might not work,
unless you place the "pch.h" and "pch.cpp" in the same dir /src.
Also: mark the "MyPreComp.cpp" as /Yc - create,
and in the .cpp files you want to use the .pch set them to Yu - use.
#include "pch.h" as the first #include in the .cpp
NB. You need to set "not using precompiled headers" to all .cpp files not using them,
yes, it IS a hassle.
( Visual Studio 2019 )
It needs to be included to each cpp file (by default)
It needs to be included in the very first line of your code (excluding the comments, it's ok to have the fancy comments on top)
It needs to be in a reachable directory. This error often happen when you have a folder structure in your project. So this can happen with a source files in some nested folder, when your precompile-header-file is up there in main. In this case, either add necessary number of "../" before the file name, or add the main folder to the "additional include directories" as it is already suggested above.
It needs to actually be the same precompile header file, that is set as the one in project setting. Check the file with "Precompiled Header" option set to "Create (/Yc)", ensure that it refers to he same header file, that you include ("pch.h" or "stdafx.h" by default) This error often happens when you include some old source to newer proj, or vice-versa, due to different default names in different studio versions: "stdafx.h" vs "pch.h".
If all above is set up, and you still have it, check if you actually set it up for the right build configuration. Always apply project setting change for all configurations. Costed me some nerves when I did it for only one config, and was trying to compile another:

Xcode - header files issue with .cpp file

I have imported my project from windows to mac and Is using xcode to compile the project.
I have managed to fix most error and bugs from the porting process but there is one bug/error I am unable to determine why its not working as it should. This probably due to my lack of knowledge of xcode but was wondering if anyone is able to help me with this problem.
The problem is this;
I have a two sub folders in my project, once called include and another called source. Of course include contains all the header files and source contains all the cpp files and such.
Example:
Root/
Include/
Header.h
Source/
test.cpp
Now in the build settings in the xcode project, I have added $(SRCROOT)/Include/ in the Header Serach Paths. So therefore I presume that xcode will include any header files in the Include folder.
So in the test.cpp class I add #include "Header.h". When I click build I get an error saying "'Header.h' file not found".
Im not entirely sure what I am doing wrong, of course I can do this for example - #include "../Include/Header.h" but that's going to be a pain going through all the cpp files in my project (which is a lot).
I was just wondering if anyone else came across this problem?
Thanks for reading.
In general you need to add the headers to the User Header Search Paths, which if you search the help in XCode will give you the format you need to pass the directory as.

Visual Studio C++ able to compile with compile errors (red underlines)

I am having a problem of getting compile errors (red underlines) like:
Error: cannot open source file "stdafx.h"
Here an edited screenshot of the environment:
On the LEFT is my Visual Studio Solution Directory list with the "Show All Files" off.
I am working on a school project, and each Folder are the source files of different parts of the project with different people who are in-charge of them.
For example, Student A and B are incharge of AST and PARSER folders (we will call them sub-projects).
We have an API for each sub-project so other sub-projects know what to call.
At the TOP-CENTER, we have my Source File for a class QueryProcessor. (just the first few lines)
Below it, is the Output for the Build Success.
The red lines are all over all the classes, mainly cause the #include "stdafx.h" cannot be opened by the environment.
On the RIGHT, that is the stdafx.h where we include all the different sub-projects so we save the trouble of each project having a different stdafx.h
However, I am able to build the project. I am pretty sure I am doing this directory/linking wrongly.
This should work
Right click on the solution file
Click Open in Windows Explorer
Find file stdfx.h in explorer and copy the path of the folder
In visual studio solution explorer, Right click on the project file
Click properties-> C/C++ -> General
In the Additional Include Directories paste the path
Combining folders and virtual folders in VC is from my point of view messy because the virtual folders indicate that all files are in one directory and the folders created on the harddrive obviously indicate that all files are in different directories. You can combine it if you know what's going on but in your case I would not recommend it.
I assume you missunderstand the purpose of stdafx.h The purpose of this header file is NOT to put all header filles into it and then just include it to all other files. Here is a SO question about this Purpose of stdafx.h
After cleaning up your stdafx.h file include as many header files into your .cpp files and only put these includes in your header files if they are required in the header file
Turn on show all files, now you will work with actual folders and you can be sure that if you adress a folder like "PKB" that this folder really exists since you can see it in the left solution explorer.
If you use using namespace std; for example make sure you also include the required header files. You might think "hey I already included e.g. iostream in another header file which I now include in this header file so I don't need it" That will really destroy you when you work with bigger projects.
Oh and regarding the stdafx.h include problem as soon as you switch to show all files I assume you will realise that stdafx is in a different file than the file where you use the include. Maybe something like #include "..\stdafx.h" is required (depending on your structure).
I think it's obivious but if you include a header file the include is allway relative to the file which is including the other header file.
stdafx.h is commonly used for creating a precompiled-header, which essentially is a compile-time optimisation such that the compiler will not continually compile these headers for every compilation unit.
If any of these headers changes, you will need to do a full system rebuild.
In reality it is preferable only to use it to include standard headers plus third-party headers (like boost libraries and similar) that you are not ever going to change.
You may decide that some of your own libraries are "set in stone" and can also be included.
Every project, i.e. every part of the project that is built into a separate unit (DLL or .exe) should have its own precompiled header and its own version of stdafx.h
Projects should only ever include their own .stdafx and not those of other projects, therefore this header file can also be used to define your dllexport macro.
When arranging your project headers you should be aware of:
1. Which headers are included externally
2. Which headers are only included internally, and are not even included indirectly externally.
The latter sort should include your stdafx.h file and should ideally not be in the same directory as those headers included from outside your project.

The purpose of stdafx.h (And: Why doesn't this work?)

I am working on a project that has a vendor-provided API. I've made a class that uses that API in my project and I've included the vendors header file in my stdafx.h file. Things would not compile.
I then put the #include directly into my class' header file and now things compile (And yes, my class includes stdafx.h so that isn't the reason.
Do any of you have any guesses as to why it wouldn't compile the first time around? This isn't a project-stopper by far but I'd prefer if I could keep all vendor API files in stdafx.h where they belong.
EDIT: Problem solved, I'd created a cyclic dependency by forgetting to #ifndef a header file and then including them in the wrong order. I feel like an idiot.
stdafx.h is mainly used in the VS generated projects as the 'container' of headers to be precompiled.
When you added a new #include to stdafx.h it didn't get included because your project is probably configured to use precompiled headers, and when you add something to stdafx.h you need to regenerate the .pch file that contains the precompiled information.
One way to do that is to have a .cpp file in your project that does nothing but #include "stdafx.h". Maybe call it `precompile.cpp". Then go to the project settings for that one .cpp file and change the following setting (for all configurations):
"C/C++ | Precompiled Headers | Precompiled Header" setting
and select "Create /Yc".
That will set up the build so that when precompile.cpp needs to be built (because the stdafx.h header it includes has changed), it'll rebuild the .pch file that everything else uses.
EDIT: Wait - I don't think I read the question right. May still be helpful, though.
Another name for stdafx.h is a 'Precompiled header'
There aren't really any 'vendor specifics' in stdafx.h, what it does is it precompiles headers so that the compiler doesn't have to re-compile them every time you build the project.
It's only really helpful if you have a huge project (or a small one that includes tonnes of headers).
I use visual studio 2010 as well, generally it's not worth the fuss - I just disable it (which would solve your class inclusion issue also - make your own header, stick the vendor's in there).