visual studio 2012 adding new header file - c++

In Visual Studio 2012 (C++ environment), for a Win32 console application, I need to include a new header file to my project. I tried copying the files in the project's location but that is of no help. The file is iGraphics.h and it is shown in the header files list but does not compile. What should be the correct approach?

You should add the path to that header to the additional include directories under C/C++ in your project settings. Afterwards, just #include "iGraphics.h" where you need it.
Don't just move header files around, and don't add existing headers to your project for no good reason. This way, you can easily change versions by just specifying a different folder.

The easiest way to do this is:
Right click on the header file (to be included) in the Solution explorer.
General->"Excluded from the build"
Select "No" from the drop down list
Click "OK".
In VS2012, just using '"' instead of '<>' around the header file in include also works.

Put the file in the right place in the file system (like you did). Then right-click your project in the solution explorer and use Add > Existing Item to add it to your project.
If you don't want to move your file (which you probably should not), see Luchian's answer on how to add the include directory to the include folders.

Related

#include <winsqlite/winsqlite3.h> works in one project, not another

From Visual Studio 2017 I created a console application to test Sqlite. The first line I put in my main file was
#include <winsqlite/winsqlite3.h>
This caused no problem (the location was found). But I tried adding this include to a source file I had obtained by migrating a legacy project to VC++ 2017. This time the include line causes an error.
I suspect I should look at
$(VC_IncludePath);$(WindowsSDK_IncludePath);
however, I do not know how I can find out what's in the macros VC_IncludePath and WindowsSDK_IncludePath, let alone change them.
Could there be any other explanation?
>>however, I do not know how I can find out what's in the macros VC_IncludePath and WindowsSDK_IncludePath, let alone change them.
In Visual Studio, open Project->Properties->VC++ Directories->Include Directories->edit->Macros, Then you can check the content of these Macros.
If you need to use a three-party library in Visual Studio, you generally need to add three places in the property page. I will show in the picture below.
include is the path of .h file and library is the path of .lib file, and you should also fill the name of .lib file in the third edit box(additional dependencies). In your case, this third-party library seems has only .h file, so just add the path of .h file to the first edit box. Or simply put the file directly in your project's root directory and add it to your project in Visual Studio, then include it.

Additional Include Directories not working

In Visual Studio C++, I go to the project settings, additional include directories, then add the directory of the file to the list. However, when I try to include the file, it can't find it, I've restarted Visual Studio and that doesn't work.
Here's my include directories:
A picture of my include directories
Here's the error I get:
A picture of the Error
The problem was that I was modifying the include directories under the release configuration mode
Make sure to switch to debug before modifying it.
Here is a way to add your file to the Project:
Go left click on the project and choose "Add"->"ExistingItem"
A simple file browser will open, now you can just pick the desired file and confirm.
Now you need just to #include "TheNewFile where you need the new file...

Storing a C++ header file globally in Windows

I'm using a library for image processing called Cimg. The library is stored in a single .h file (cimg.h).
I need to create several Visual Studio solutions(one solution for each exercise).
Where can I put this file globally so that I don't have to copy it to the Visual Studio solution each time?
You can put your header file anywhere you want, then add that folder as additional include directory for your visual studio project: Right click your project in the solution explorer, then:
Configuration properties->C/C++->General->Additional Include Directories
Just add the path there, and you can simply include CImg.h by:
#include <CImg.h>

Visual Studio can't 'see' my included header files

I created an empty 'Demo' project in Visual Studio 2008 and added some existing projects to my solution. Included "MyHeader.h" (other project's header) in main.cpp file which is in 'Demo'. Also added header files' path in "Tools/Option/VC++ Directories/Include files" section. But intellisense says: "File MyHeader.h not found in current source file's directory or in build system paths..."
How the problem can be fixed?
Delete the .sdf file that is in your solution directory. It's just the Intellisense database, and Visual Studio will recreate it the next time you open that solution. This db can get corrupted and cause the IDE to not be able to find things, and since the compiler generates this information for itself on the fly, it wouldn't be affected.
If you choose Project and then All Files in the menu, all files should be displayed in the Solution Explorer that are physically in your project map, but not (yet) included in your project. If you right click on the file you want to add in the Solution Explorer, you can include it.
This happened to me just now, after shutting down and restarting the computer. Eventually I realised that the architecture had somehow been changed to ARM from x64.
In Visual Studio 2019 in my case I copied a header file into the project directory, just near the other files. Intellisense could see it, but the build failed. Fair enough, it wasn't actually added to the project. I added it as existing item but this is the point that Visual Studio still didn't account for it.
Solution:
Close the project.
Delete the .vs directory.
Reopen the project.
Now Visual Studio recreates the directory with everything in it and it can now see the included file.
If it is the case that only the IDE indicates that it cannot find included files, but compiling is successful, the issue is simply that IntelliSense is not fully up to date with recent changes. This can happen specifically when including existing projects, in my own experience.
Deleting the .sdf file (= IntelliSense database) that is generated in your solution directory forces Visual Studio to regenerate it, so that it is up to date again. Just doing a "clean" will probably do the same thing, but takes more time since everything will be generated again then.
I know this is an older question, but none of the above answers worked for me. In my case, the issue turned out to be that I had absolute include paths but without drive letters. Compilation was fine, but Visual Studio couldn't find an include file when I right-clicked and tried to open it. Adding the drive letters to my include paths corrected the problem.
I would never recommend hard-coding drive letters in any aspect of your project files; either use relative paths, macros, environment variables, or some mix of the tree for any permanent situation. However, in this case, I'm working in some temporary projects where absolute paths were necessary in the short term. Not being able to right-click to open the files was extremely frustrating, and hopefully this will help others.
Had the same problem. Double check if you added the include files to Debug or Release Version of your project. If you only added it for one of them and compile for the other VS will just play dumb and not find them.
Try adding the header file to your project's files. (right click on project -> add existing file).
In my experience, with VS2010, when include files can't be found at compile time, doing a clean, then build usually fixes the problem. It's not that rare for the editor to be able to open an include file and then the compiler to announce that it can't find that very file, even when it is open on the screen!
If the visual studio says that you miss some file in the current source file folder, there is one solution that i used. Just right click the file you want to add and choose Open Document, if it really doesn't exist, then you should see something like cannot find file in the source file path = "somewhere in your computer", then what you could do is the add your source file into that path first and see if it works.
I had this issue after upgrading to Visual Studio 2019 from 2015. It would compile the project fine but Intellisense and the IDE couldn't find any header files.
The project only had valid configuration for Win32/Debug. Include paths were not setup correctly for other environments. Even though Visual Studio displayed the current environment as Win32/Debug, Intellisense must have been using something else.
Changing the current environment to x64/Release, and then back to Win32/Debug fixed it.
In Visual Studio, click on Project > Rescan Solution as shown below to rebuild the project database.
Here's how I solved this problem.
Go to Project --> Show All Files.
Right click all the files in Solutions Explorer and Click on Include in Project in all the files you want to include.
Done :)
I encountered this issue, but the solutions provided didn't directly help me, so I'm sharing how I got myself into a similar situation and temporarily resolved it.
I created a new project within an existing solution and copy & pasted the Header and CPP file from another project within that solution that I needed to include in my new project through the IDE. Intellisense displayed an error suggesting it could not resolve the reference to the header file and compiling the code failed with the same error too.
After reading the posts here, I checked the project folder with Windows File Explorer and only the main.cpp file was found. For some reason, my copy and paste of the header file and CPP file were just a reference? (I assume) and did not physically copy the file into the new project file.
I deleted the files from the Project view within Visual Studio and I used File Explorer to copy the files that I needed to the project folder/directory. I then referenced the other solutions posted here to "include files in project" by showing all files and this resolved the problem.
It boiled down to the files not being physically in the Project folder/directory even though they were shown correctly within the IDE.
Please Note I understand duplicating code is not best practice and my situation is purely a learning/hobby project. It's probably in my best interest and anyone else who ended up in a similar situation to use the IDE/project/Solution setup correctly when reusing code from other projects - I'm still learning and I'll figure this out one day!
If some soul has scrolled down to this bottom, what worked for me was disabling the Disable Database option i.e. set it to False under Tools|Options|Text Editor|C/C++|Advanced. For some reason, it was set to True for me.
As per docs, if it's set to True
All use of the code browsing database (SDF), all other
Browsing/Navigation options, and all IntelliSense features except for
#include Auto Complete are disabled.
None of the solutions worked for me. Here is what was the issue for me:
(Note discrepancy in build configuration and VC++ Directories (x86 vs x64)
To fix, just changed the build configuration to 'x86':

Copying C++ API header files to a common directory

I have a Visual Studio 2008 solution comprised of several projects. Only some header files in each project represents API to the library built from the project.
Is there a way in Visual Studio to copy the files to a common directory prior compilation?
(I want to do it in order prevent including unintentionally header file I'm not supposed to)
Thanks
Dima
Yes, on the project menu, select properties->configuration properties->build events->pre-build event. In the command line section you can enter a copy command with your source and destination paths. You may find the $solutiondir macro useful when enterting your paths.
You can run a script before compilation to do this (see pre-build step) but I don't think this is what you are asking.
Do you mean how can you have header files in another directory used by several projectS? Simply add that directory to the "Additional Include Directories" field in project settings-C++ ->General
>