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I've never really understood why C++ needs a separate header file with the same functions as in the .cpp file. It makes creating classes and refactoring them very difficult, and it adds unnecessary files to the project. And then there is the problem with having to include header files, but having to explicitly check if it has already been included.
C++ was ratified in 1998, so why is it designed this way? What advantages does having a separate header file have?
Follow up question:
How does the compiler find the .cpp file with the code in it, when all I include is the .h file? Does it assume that the .cpp file has the same name as the .h file, or does it actually look through all the files in the directory tree?
Some people consider header files an advantage:
It is claimed that it enables/enforces/allows separation of interface and implementation -- but usually, this is not the case. Header files are full of implementation details (for example member variables of a class have to be specified in the header, even though they're not part of the public interface), and functions can, and often are, defined inline in the class declaration in the header, again destroying this separation.
It is sometimes said to improve compile-time because each translation unit can be processed independently. And yet C++ is probably the slowest language in existence when it comes to compile-times. A part of the reason is the many many repeated inclusions of the same header. A large number of headers are included by multiple translation units, requiring them to be parsed multiple times.
Ultimately, the header system is an artifact from the 70's when C was designed. Back then, computers had very little memory, and keeping the entire module in memory just wasn't an option. A compiler had to start reading the file at the top, and then proceed linearly through the source code. The header mechanism enables this. The compiler doesn't have to consider other translation units, it just has to read the code from top to bottom.
And C++ retained this system for backwards compatibility.
Today, it makes no sense. It is inefficient, error-prone and overcomplicated. There are far better ways to separate interface and implementation, if that was the goal.
However, one of the proposals for C++0x was to add a proper module system, allowing code to be compiled similar to .NET or Java, into larger modules, all in one go and without headers. This proposal didn't make the cut in C++0x, but I believe it's still in the "we'd love to do this later" category. Perhaps in a TR2 or similar.
You seem to be asking about separating definitions from declarations, although there are other uses for header files.
The answer is that C++ doesn't "need" this. If you mark everything inline (which is automatic anyway for member functions defined in a class definition), then there is no need for the separation. You can just define everything in the header files.
The reasons you might want to separate are:
To improve build times.
To link against code without having the source for the definitions.
To avoid marking everything "inline".
If your more general question is, "why isn't C++ identical to Java?", then I have to ask, "why are you writing C++ instead of Java?" ;-p
More seriously, though, the reason is that the C++ compiler can't just reach into another translation unit and figure out how to use its symbols, in the way that javac can and does. The header file is needed to declare to the compiler what it can expect to be available at link time.
So #include is a straight textual substitution. If you define everything in header files, the preprocessor ends up creating an enormous copy and paste of every source file in your project, and feeding that into the compiler. The fact that the C++ standard was ratified in 1998 has nothing to do with this, it's the fact that the compilation environment for C++ is based so closely on that of C.
Converting my comments to answer your follow-up question:
How does the compiler find the .cpp file with the code in it
It doesn't, at least not at the time it compiles the code that used the header file. The functions you're linking against don't even need to have been written yet, never mind the compiler knowing what .cpp file they'll be in. Everything the calling code needs to know at compile time is expressed in the function declaration. At link time you will provide a list of .o files, or static or dynamic libraries, and the header in effect is a promise that the definitions of the functions will be in there somewhere.
C++ does it that way because C did it that way, so the real question is why did C do it that way? Wikipedia speaks a little to this.
Newer compiled languages (such as
Java, C#) do not use forward
declarations; identifiers are
recognized automatically from source
files and read directly from dynamic
library symbols. This means header
files are not needed.
To my (limited - I'm not a C developer normally) understanding, this is rooted in C. Remember that C does not know what classes or namespaces are, it's just one long program. Also, functions have to be declared before you use them.
For example, the following should give a compiler error:
void SomeFunction() {
SomeOtherFunction();
}
void SomeOtherFunction() {
printf("What?");
}
The error should be that "SomeOtherFunction is not declared" because you call it before it's declaration. One way of fixing this is by moving SomeOtherFunction above SomeFunction. Another approach is to declare the functions signature first:
void SomeOtherFunction();
void SomeFunction() {
SomeOtherFunction();
}
void SomeOtherFunction() {
printf("What?");
}
This lets the compiler know: Look somewhere in the code, there is a function called SomeOtherFunction that returns void and does not take any parameters. So if you encouter code that tries to call SomeOtherFunction, do not panic and instead go looking for it.
Now, imagine you have SomeFunction and SomeOtherFunction in two different .c files. You then have to #include "SomeOther.c" in Some.c. Now, add some "private" functions to SomeOther.c. As C does not know private functions, that function would be available in Some.c as well.
This is where .h Files come in: They specify all the functions (and variables) that you want to 'Export' from a .c file that can be accessed in other .c files. That way, you gain something like a Public/Private scope. Also, you can give this .h file to other people without having to share your source code - .h files work against compiled .lib files as well.
So the main reason is really for convenience, for source code protection and to have a bit of decoupling between the parts of your application.
That was C though. C++ introduced Classes and private/public modifiers, so while you could still ask if they are needed, C++ AFAIK still requires declaration of functions before using them. Also, many C++ Developers are or were C devleopers as well and took over their concepts and habits to C++ - why change what isn't broken?
First advantage: If you don't have header files, you would have to include source files in other source files. This would cause the including files to be compiled again when the included file changes.
Second advantage: It allows sharing the interfaces without sharing the code between different units (different developers, teams, companies etc..)
The need for header files results from the limitations that the compiler has for knowing about the type information for functions and or variables in other modules. The compiled program or library does not include the type information required by the compiler to bind to any objects defined in other compilation units.
In order to compensate for this limitation, C and C++ allow for declarations and these declarations can be included into modules that use them with the help of the preprocessor's #include directive.
Languages like Java or C# on the other hand include the information necessary for binding in the compiler's output (class-file or assembly). Hence, there is no longer a need for maintaining standalone declarations to be included by clients of a module.
The reason for the binding information not being included in the compiler output is simple: it is not needed at runtime (any type checking occurs at compile time). It would just waste space. Remember that C/C++ come from a time where the size of an executable or library did matter quite a bit.
Well, C++ was ratified in 1998, but it had been in use for a lot longer than that, and the ratification was primarily setting down current usage rather than imposing structure. And since C++ was based on C, and C has header files, C++ has them too.
The main reason for header files is to enable separate compilation of files, and minimize dependencies.
Say I have foo.cpp, and I want to use code from the bar.h/bar.cpp files.
I can #include "bar.h" in foo.cpp, and then program and compile foo.cpp even if bar.cpp doesn't exist. The header file acts as a promise to the compiler that the classes/functions in bar.h will exist at run-time, and it has everything it needs to know already.
Of course, if the functions in bar.h don't have bodies when I try to link my program, then it won't link and I'll get an error.
A side-effect is that you can give users a header file without revealing your source code.
Another is that if you change the implementation of your code in the *.cpp file, but do not change the header at all, you only need to compile the *.cpp file instead of everything that uses it. Of course, if you put a lot of implementation into the header file, then this becomes less useful.
C++ was designed to add modern programming language features to the C infrastructure, without unnecessarily changing anything about C that wasn't specifically about the language itself.
Yes, at this point (10 years after the first C++ standard and 20 years after it began seriously growing in usage) it is easy to ask why doesn't it have a proper module system. Obviously any new language being designed today would not work like C++. But that isn't the point of C++.
The point of C++ is to be evolutionary, a smooth continuation of existing practise, only adding new capabilities without (too often) breaking things that work adequately for its user community.
This means that it makes some things harder (especially for people starting a new project), and some things easier (especially for those maintaining existing code) than other languages would do.
So rather than expecting C++ to turn into C# (which would be pointless as we already have C#), why not just pick the right tool for the job? Myself, I endeavour to write significant chunks of new functionality in a modern language (I happen to use C#), and I have a large amount of existing C++ that I am keeping in C++ because there would be no real value in re-writing it all. They integrate very nicely anyway, so it's largely painless.
It doesn't need a separate header file with the same functions as in main. It only needs it if you develop an application using multiple code files and if you use a function that was not previously declared.
It's really a scope problem.
C++ was ratified in 1998, so why is it designed this way? What advantages does having a separate header file have?
Actually header files become very useful when examining programs for the first time, checking out header files(using only a text editor) gives you an overview of the architecture of the program, unlike other languages where you have to use sophisticated tools to view classes and their member functions.
If you want the compiler to find out symbols defined in other files automatically, you need to force programmer to put those files in predefined locations (like Java packages structure determines folders structure of the project). I prefer header files. Also you would need either sources of libraries you use or some uniform way to put information needed by compiler in binaries.
I think the real (historical) reason behind header files was making like easier for compiler developers... but then, header files do give advantages.
Check this previous post for more discussions...
Well, you can perfectly develop C++ without header files. In fact some libraries that intensively use templates does not use the header/code files paradigm (see boost). But In C/C++ you can not use something that is not declared. One practical way to
deal with that is to use header files. Plus, you gain the advantage of sharing interface whithout sharing code/implementation. And I think it was not envisionned by the C creators : When you use shared header files you have to use the famous :
#ifndef MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
#define MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
// [...]
// my header
// [...]
#endif // MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
that is not really a language feature but a practical way to deal with multiple inclusion.
So, I think that when C was created, the problems with forward declaration was underestimated and now when using a high level language like C++ we have to deal with this sort of things.
Another burden for us poor C++ users ...
I've never really understood why C++ needs a separate header file with the same functions as in the .cpp file. It makes creating classes and refactoring them very difficult, and it adds unnecessary files to the project. And then there is the problem with having to include header files, but having to explicitly check if it has already been included.
C++ was ratified in 1998, so why is it designed this way? What advantages does having a separate header file have?
Follow up question:
How does the compiler find the .cpp file with the code in it, when all I include is the .h file? Does it assume that the .cpp file has the same name as the .h file, or does it actually look through all the files in the directory tree?
Some people consider header files an advantage:
It is claimed that it enables/enforces/allows separation of interface and implementation -- but usually, this is not the case. Header files are full of implementation details (for example member variables of a class have to be specified in the header, even though they're not part of the public interface), and functions can, and often are, defined inline in the class declaration in the header, again destroying this separation.
It is sometimes said to improve compile-time because each translation unit can be processed independently. And yet C++ is probably the slowest language in existence when it comes to compile-times. A part of the reason is the many many repeated inclusions of the same header. A large number of headers are included by multiple translation units, requiring them to be parsed multiple times.
Ultimately, the header system is an artifact from the 70's when C was designed. Back then, computers had very little memory, and keeping the entire module in memory just wasn't an option. A compiler had to start reading the file at the top, and then proceed linearly through the source code. The header mechanism enables this. The compiler doesn't have to consider other translation units, it just has to read the code from top to bottom.
And C++ retained this system for backwards compatibility.
Today, it makes no sense. It is inefficient, error-prone and overcomplicated. There are far better ways to separate interface and implementation, if that was the goal.
However, one of the proposals for C++0x was to add a proper module system, allowing code to be compiled similar to .NET or Java, into larger modules, all in one go and without headers. This proposal didn't make the cut in C++0x, but I believe it's still in the "we'd love to do this later" category. Perhaps in a TR2 or similar.
You seem to be asking about separating definitions from declarations, although there are other uses for header files.
The answer is that C++ doesn't "need" this. If you mark everything inline (which is automatic anyway for member functions defined in a class definition), then there is no need for the separation. You can just define everything in the header files.
The reasons you might want to separate are:
To improve build times.
To link against code without having the source for the definitions.
To avoid marking everything "inline".
If your more general question is, "why isn't C++ identical to Java?", then I have to ask, "why are you writing C++ instead of Java?" ;-p
More seriously, though, the reason is that the C++ compiler can't just reach into another translation unit and figure out how to use its symbols, in the way that javac can and does. The header file is needed to declare to the compiler what it can expect to be available at link time.
So #include is a straight textual substitution. If you define everything in header files, the preprocessor ends up creating an enormous copy and paste of every source file in your project, and feeding that into the compiler. The fact that the C++ standard was ratified in 1998 has nothing to do with this, it's the fact that the compilation environment for C++ is based so closely on that of C.
Converting my comments to answer your follow-up question:
How does the compiler find the .cpp file with the code in it
It doesn't, at least not at the time it compiles the code that used the header file. The functions you're linking against don't even need to have been written yet, never mind the compiler knowing what .cpp file they'll be in. Everything the calling code needs to know at compile time is expressed in the function declaration. At link time you will provide a list of .o files, or static or dynamic libraries, and the header in effect is a promise that the definitions of the functions will be in there somewhere.
C++ does it that way because C did it that way, so the real question is why did C do it that way? Wikipedia speaks a little to this.
Newer compiled languages (such as
Java, C#) do not use forward
declarations; identifiers are
recognized automatically from source
files and read directly from dynamic
library symbols. This means header
files are not needed.
To my (limited - I'm not a C developer normally) understanding, this is rooted in C. Remember that C does not know what classes or namespaces are, it's just one long program. Also, functions have to be declared before you use them.
For example, the following should give a compiler error:
void SomeFunction() {
SomeOtherFunction();
}
void SomeOtherFunction() {
printf("What?");
}
The error should be that "SomeOtherFunction is not declared" because you call it before it's declaration. One way of fixing this is by moving SomeOtherFunction above SomeFunction. Another approach is to declare the functions signature first:
void SomeOtherFunction();
void SomeFunction() {
SomeOtherFunction();
}
void SomeOtherFunction() {
printf("What?");
}
This lets the compiler know: Look somewhere in the code, there is a function called SomeOtherFunction that returns void and does not take any parameters. So if you encouter code that tries to call SomeOtherFunction, do not panic and instead go looking for it.
Now, imagine you have SomeFunction and SomeOtherFunction in two different .c files. You then have to #include "SomeOther.c" in Some.c. Now, add some "private" functions to SomeOther.c. As C does not know private functions, that function would be available in Some.c as well.
This is where .h Files come in: They specify all the functions (and variables) that you want to 'Export' from a .c file that can be accessed in other .c files. That way, you gain something like a Public/Private scope. Also, you can give this .h file to other people without having to share your source code - .h files work against compiled .lib files as well.
So the main reason is really for convenience, for source code protection and to have a bit of decoupling between the parts of your application.
That was C though. C++ introduced Classes and private/public modifiers, so while you could still ask if they are needed, C++ AFAIK still requires declaration of functions before using them. Also, many C++ Developers are or were C devleopers as well and took over their concepts and habits to C++ - why change what isn't broken?
First advantage: If you don't have header files, you would have to include source files in other source files. This would cause the including files to be compiled again when the included file changes.
Second advantage: It allows sharing the interfaces without sharing the code between different units (different developers, teams, companies etc..)
The need for header files results from the limitations that the compiler has for knowing about the type information for functions and or variables in other modules. The compiled program or library does not include the type information required by the compiler to bind to any objects defined in other compilation units.
In order to compensate for this limitation, C and C++ allow for declarations and these declarations can be included into modules that use them with the help of the preprocessor's #include directive.
Languages like Java or C# on the other hand include the information necessary for binding in the compiler's output (class-file or assembly). Hence, there is no longer a need for maintaining standalone declarations to be included by clients of a module.
The reason for the binding information not being included in the compiler output is simple: it is not needed at runtime (any type checking occurs at compile time). It would just waste space. Remember that C/C++ come from a time where the size of an executable or library did matter quite a bit.
Well, C++ was ratified in 1998, but it had been in use for a lot longer than that, and the ratification was primarily setting down current usage rather than imposing structure. And since C++ was based on C, and C has header files, C++ has them too.
The main reason for header files is to enable separate compilation of files, and minimize dependencies.
Say I have foo.cpp, and I want to use code from the bar.h/bar.cpp files.
I can #include "bar.h" in foo.cpp, and then program and compile foo.cpp even if bar.cpp doesn't exist. The header file acts as a promise to the compiler that the classes/functions in bar.h will exist at run-time, and it has everything it needs to know already.
Of course, if the functions in bar.h don't have bodies when I try to link my program, then it won't link and I'll get an error.
A side-effect is that you can give users a header file without revealing your source code.
Another is that if you change the implementation of your code in the *.cpp file, but do not change the header at all, you only need to compile the *.cpp file instead of everything that uses it. Of course, if you put a lot of implementation into the header file, then this becomes less useful.
C++ was designed to add modern programming language features to the C infrastructure, without unnecessarily changing anything about C that wasn't specifically about the language itself.
Yes, at this point (10 years after the first C++ standard and 20 years after it began seriously growing in usage) it is easy to ask why doesn't it have a proper module system. Obviously any new language being designed today would not work like C++. But that isn't the point of C++.
The point of C++ is to be evolutionary, a smooth continuation of existing practise, only adding new capabilities without (too often) breaking things that work adequately for its user community.
This means that it makes some things harder (especially for people starting a new project), and some things easier (especially for those maintaining existing code) than other languages would do.
So rather than expecting C++ to turn into C# (which would be pointless as we already have C#), why not just pick the right tool for the job? Myself, I endeavour to write significant chunks of new functionality in a modern language (I happen to use C#), and I have a large amount of existing C++ that I am keeping in C++ because there would be no real value in re-writing it all. They integrate very nicely anyway, so it's largely painless.
It doesn't need a separate header file with the same functions as in main. It only needs it if you develop an application using multiple code files and if you use a function that was not previously declared.
It's really a scope problem.
C++ was ratified in 1998, so why is it designed this way? What advantages does having a separate header file have?
Actually header files become very useful when examining programs for the first time, checking out header files(using only a text editor) gives you an overview of the architecture of the program, unlike other languages where you have to use sophisticated tools to view classes and their member functions.
If you want the compiler to find out symbols defined in other files automatically, you need to force programmer to put those files in predefined locations (like Java packages structure determines folders structure of the project). I prefer header files. Also you would need either sources of libraries you use or some uniform way to put information needed by compiler in binaries.
I think the real (historical) reason behind header files was making like easier for compiler developers... but then, header files do give advantages.
Check this previous post for more discussions...
Well, you can perfectly develop C++ without header files. In fact some libraries that intensively use templates does not use the header/code files paradigm (see boost). But In C/C++ you can not use something that is not declared. One practical way to
deal with that is to use header files. Plus, you gain the advantage of sharing interface whithout sharing code/implementation. And I think it was not envisionned by the C creators : When you use shared header files you have to use the famous :
#ifndef MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
#define MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
// [...]
// my header
// [...]
#endif // MY_HEADER_SWEET_GUARDIAN
that is not really a language feature but a practical way to deal with multiple inclusion.
So, I think that when C was created, the problems with forward declaration was underestimated and now when using a high level language like C++ we have to deal with this sort of things.
Another burden for us poor C++ users ...
I am working on a rather large code base that has a bit of the #ifdef magic going on. I'm looking at one file and trying to determine where a type is defined. Unfortunately, it includes many file, which include many files, which include many files, etc. some of which define macros that affect which definitions you might use. The structure is sufficiently complicated that after 10 minutes worth of grepping and following the include chains, I still have no idea which definition is being used. I recall that visual studio has a nice feature where I can right click on the type and it will show where the type is defined. Is there an equivalent nice tool for linux that reads make files, etc? I'm sure there is, but I still just use vim + grep for my development environment.
With complicated defines and dependencies this feature doesn't always work in Visual Studio either.
Solution: ask your compiler to dump the code after it was preprocessed, ask it to print #line and #file directives too. Search through the resulted file for your type, then look at the closest #file directive to see where it came from.
(In GCC you can use the -E switch)
I don't quite understand the point of having a header; it seems to violate the DRY principle! All the information in a header is (can be) contained in the implementation.
It simplifies the compilation process. When you want to compile units independently, you need something to describe the parts that will be linked to without having to import the entirety of all the other files.
It also allows for code hiding. One can distribute a header to allow others to use the functionality without having to distribute the implementation.
Finally, it can encourage the separation of interface from implementation.
They are not the only way to solve these problems, but 30 years ago they were a good one. We probably wouldn't use header files for a language today, but they weren't invented in 2009.
The architects of many modern languages such as Java, Eiffel and C# clearly agree with you -- those languages extract the metadata about a module from the implementation. However, per se, the concept of headers doesn't preclude that -- it would obviously be a simple task for a compiler to extract a .h file while compiling a .c, for example, just like the compilers for those other languages do implicitly. The fact that typical current C compilers do not do it is not a language design issue -- it's an implementation issue; apparently there's no demand by users for such a feature, so no compiler vendor bothers implementing it.
As a language design choice, having separate .h files (in a human-readable and editable text format) gives you the best of both worlds: you can start separately compiling client code based on a module implementation that doesn't yet exist, if you wish, by writing the .h file by hand; or you (assuming by absurd a compiler implementation that supplies it;-) can get the .h file automatically from the implementation as a side effect of compiling it.
If C, C++, &c, keep thriving (apparently they're still doing fine today;-), and demand like yours for not manually writing headers grows, eventually compiler writers will have to supply the "header generation" option, and the "best of both worlds" won't stay theoretical!-)
It helps to think a bit about the capabilities of the computers that were available when, say c, was written. Main memory was measured in kilowords, and not necessarily very many of them. Disks were bigger, but not much. Serrious storage meant reel-to-reel tapes, mounted by hand, by grumpy operators, who really wanted you to go away so they could play hunt the wumpus. A 1 MIPS machine was screaming fast. And with all these limitation you had to share it. Possibly with a score of other users.
Anything that reduced the space or time complexity of compilation was a big win. And headers do both.
Don't forget the documentation a header provides. There is usually anything in it you need to know for using the module. I for my part don't want to scan through a looong sourcecode to learn what there is that I need to use and how to call it... You would extract this information anyway, which effectively results in -- a header file. No longer an issue with modern IDEs, of course, but working with some old C code I really love to have hand-crafted header files that include comments about the usage and about pre- and postconditions.
Keeping source, header and additional documentation in sync still is another can of worms...
The whole idea of inspecting the binary output files of language processors would have been hard to comprehend when C invented .h files. There was a system called JOVIAL that did something like it, but it was exotic and confined more-or-less exclusively to military projects. (I've never seen a JOVIAL program, I've only heard about it.)
So when C came out the usual design pattern for modularity was "no checks whatsoever". There might be a restriction that .text symbols could only link to .text and .data to .data, but that was it. That is, the compilers of the day typically processed one source file at a time and then linkers put them together without the slightest level of error checking other than, if you were lucky, "I'm a function symbol" vs "I'm a data symbol".
So the idea of actually having the compiler understand the thing you were calling was somewhat new.
Even today, if you make a totally bogus header, no one catches you in most AOT compilers. Clever things like CLR languages and Java actually do encode things in the class files.
So yes, in the long run, we probably won't have header files.
No you dont have headers in Java -- but you do have interfaces and I every serious Java guru recommends you define anything used by other projects/systems as an interface and an implementation.
Lets see a java interface definition contains call signatures, type definitions and contants.
MOST C header files contain call signatures, type definitions and constants.
So for all pratical purposes C/C++ header files are just interface definitions and should thus be considered a Good Thing. Now I know its possible to define a myriad other things in header files as well (MARCROs, constants etc. etc. ) but that just part of the whole wonderful world of C:-
int function target () {
// Default for shoot
return FOOT;
}
For Detail Read this
A header file commonly contains forward declarations of classes, subroutines, variables, and other identifiers. Programmers who wish to declare standardized identifiers in more than one source file can place such identifiers in a single header file, which other code can then include whenever the header contents are required.
The C standard library and C++ standard library traditionally declare their standard functions in header files.
And what if you want to give somebody else the declarations to use your library without giving them the implementation?
As another answer points out - the original reason for headers was to make the parse/compile easier on platforms with very simple and limited tools. It was a great step forward to have a machine with 2 floppies so you could have the compiler on one and your code on the other - made things a lot easier.
When you divide code in header and source files you divide declaration and definition. When you look in header files you can see what you have and if you wand to see implementation details you go to source file.
Is there any way to not have to write function declarations twice (headers) and still retain the same scalability in compiling, clarity in debugging, and flexibility in design when programming in C++?
Use Lzz. It takes a single file and automatically creates a .h and .cpp for you with all the declarations/definitions in the right place.
Lzz is really very powerful, and handles 99% of full C++ syntax, including templates, specializations etc etc etc.
Update 150120:
Newer C++ '11/14 syntax can only be used within Lzz function bodies.
I felt the same way when I started writing C, so I also looked into this. The answer is that yes, it's possible and no, you don't want to.
First with the yes.
In GCC, you can do this:
// foo.cph
void foo();
#if __INCLUDE_LEVEL__ == 0
void foo() {
printf("Hello World!\n");
}
#endif
This has the intended effect: you combine both header and source into one file that can both be included and linked.
Then with the no:
This only works if the compiler has access to the entire source. You can't use this trick when writing a library that you want to distribute but keep closed-source. Either you distribute the full .cph file, or you have to write a separate .h file to go with your .lib. Although maybe you could auto-generate it with the macro preprocessor. It would get hairy though.
And reason #2 why you don't want this, and that's probably the best one: compilation speed. Normally, C sources files only have to be recompiled when the file itself changes, or any of the files it includes changes.
The C file can change frequently, but the change only involves recompiling the one file that changed.
Header files define interfaces, so they shouldn't change as often. When they do however, they trigger a recompile of every source file that includes them.
When all your files are combined header and source files, every change will trigger a recompile of all source files. C++ isn't known for its fast compile times even now, imagine what would happen when the entire project had to be recompiled every time. Then extrapolate that to a project of hundreds of source files with complicated dependencies...
Sorry, but there's no such thing as a "best practice" for eliminating headers in C++: it's a bad idea, period. If you hate them that much, you have three choices:
Become intimately familiar with C++ internals and any compilers you're using; you're going to run into different problems than the average C++ developer, and you'll probably need to solve them without a lot of help.
Pick a language you can use "right" without getting depressed
Get a tool to generate them for you; you'll still have headers, but you save some typing effort
In his article Simple Support for Design by Contract in C++, Pedro Guerreiro stated:
Usually, a C++ class comes in two
files: the header file and the
definition file. Where should we write
the assertions: in the header file,
because assertions are specification?
Or in the definition file, since they
are executable? Or in both, running
the risk of inconsistency (and
duplicating work)? We recommend,
instead, that we forsake the
traditional style, and do away with
the definition file, using only the
header file, as if all functions were
defined inline, very much like Java
and Eiffel do.
This is such a drastic
change from the C++ normality that it
risks killing the endeavor at the
outset. On the other hand, maintaining
two files for each class is so
awkward, that sooner or later a C++
development environment will come up
that hides that from us, allowing us
to concentrate on our classes, without
having to worry about where they are
stored.
That was 2001. I agreed. It is 2009 now and still no "development environment that hides that from us, allowing us to concentrate on our classes" has come up. Instead, long compile times are the norm.
Note: The link above seems to be dead now. This is the full reference to the publication, as it appears in the Publications section of the author's website:
Pedro Guerreiro, Simple Support for Design by Contract in C++, TOOLS USA 2001, Proceedings, pages 24-34, IEEE, 2001.
There is no practical way to get around headers. The only thing you could do is to put all code into one big c++ file. That will end up in an umaintainable mess, so please don't do it.
At the moment C++ header-files are a nessesary evil. I don't like them, but there is no way around them. I'd love to see some improvements and fresh ideas on the problem though.
Btw - once you've got used to it it's not that bad anymore.. C++ (and any other language as well) has more anoying things.
What I have seen some people like you do is write everything in the headers. That gives your desired property of only having to write the method profiles once.
Personally I think there are very good reasons why it is better to separate declaration and definition, but if this distresses you there is a way to do what you want.
There's header file generation software. I've never used it, but it might be worth looking into. For instance, check out mkhdr! It supposedly scans C and C++ files and generates the appropriate header files.
(However, as Richard points out, this seems to limit you from using certain C++ functionality. See Richard's answer instead here right in this thread.)
You have to write function declaration twice, actually (once in header file, once in implementation file). The definition (AKA implementation) of the function will be written once, in the implementation file.
You can write all the code in header files (it is actually a very used practice in generic programming in C++), but this implies that every C/CPP file including that header will imply recompilation of the implementation from those header files.
If you are thinking to a system similar to C# or Java, it is not possible in C++.
Nobody has mentioned Visual-Assist X under Visual Studio 2012 yet.
It has a bunch of menus and hotkeys that you can use to ease the pain of maintaining headers:
"Create Declaration" copies the function declaration from the current function into the .hpp file.
"Refactor..Change signature" allows you to simultaneously update the .cpp and .h file with one command.
Alt-O allows you to instantly flip between .cpp and .h file.
C++ 20 modules solve this problem. There is no need for copy-pasting anymore! Just write your code in a single file and export things using "export".
export module mymodule;
export int myfunc() {
return 1
}
Read more about modules here: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/modules
At the time of writing this answer (2022 Feb), these compilers support it:
See here for the supported compilers:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/compiler_support
See this answer if you want to use modules with CMake:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/71119196/7910299
Actually... You can write the entire implementation in a file. Templated classes are all defined in the header file with no cpp file.
You can also save then with whatever extensions you want. Then in #include statements, you would include your file.
/* mycode.cpp */
#pragma once
#include <iostreams.h>
class myclass {
public:
myclass();
dothing();
};
myclass::myclass() { }
myclass::dothing()
{
// code
}
Then in another file
/* myothercode.cpp */
#pragma once
#include "mycode.cpp"
int main() {
myclass A;
A.dothing();
return 0;
}
You may need to setup some build rules, but it should work.
You can avoid headers. Completely. But I don't recommend it.
You'll be faced with some very specific limitations. One of them is you won't be able to have circular references (you won't be able to have class Parent contain a pointer to an instance of class ChildNode, and class ChildNode also contain a pointer to an instance of class Parent. It'd have to be one or the other.)
There are other limitations which just end up making your code really weird. Stick to headers. You'll learn to actually like them (since they provide a nice quick synopsis of what a class can do).
To offer a variant on the popular answer of rix0rrr:
// foo.cph
#define INCLUDEMODE
#include "foo.cph"
#include "other.cph"
#undef INCLUDEMODE
void foo()
#if !defined(INCLUDEMODE)
{
printf("Hello World!\n");
}
#else
;
#endif
void bar()
#if !defined(INCLUDEMODE)
{
foo();
}
#else
;
#endif
I do not recommend this, bit I think this construction demonstrates the removal of content repetition at the cost of rote repetition. I guess it makes copy-pasta easier? That's not really a virtue.
As with all the other tricks of this nature, a modification to the body of a function will still require recompilation of all files including the file containing that function. Very careful automated tools can partially avoid this, but they would still have to parse the source file to check, and be carefully constructed to not rewrite their output if it's no different.
For other readers: I spent a few minutes trying to figure out include guards in this format, but didn't come up with anything good. Comments?
I understand your problems. I would say that the C++ main problem is the compilation/build method that it inherited from the C. The C/C++ header structure has been designed in times when coding involved less definitions and more implementations. Don't throw bottles on me, but that's how it looks like.
Since then the OOP has conquered the world and the world is more about definitions then implementations. As the result, including headers makes pretty painful to work with a language where the fundamental collections such as the ones in the STL made with templates which are notoriously difficult job for the compiler to deal with. All those magic with the precompiled headers doesn't help so much when it comes to TDD, refactoring tools, the general development environment.
Of course C programmers are not suffering from this too much since they don't have compiler-heavy header files and so they are happy with the pretty straightforward, low-level compilation tool chain. With C++ this is a history of suffering: endless forward declarations, precompiled headers, external parsers, custom preprocessors etc.
Many people, however, does not realize that the C++ is the ONLY language that has strong and modern solutions for high- and low-level problems. It's easy to say that you should go for an other language with proper reflection and build system, but it is non-sense that we have to sacrifice the low-level programming solutions with that and we need to complicate things with low-level language mixed with some virtual-machine/JIT based solution.
I have this idea for some time now, that it would be the most cool thing on earth to have a "unit" based c++ tool-chain, similar to that in D. The problem comes up with the cross-platform part: the object files are able to store any information, no problem with that, but since on windows the object file's structure is different that of the ELF, it would be pain in the ass to implement a cross-platform solution to store and process the half-way-compilation units.
After reading all the other answers, I find it missing that there is ongoing work to add support for modules in the C++ standard. It will not make it to C++0x, but the intention is that it will be tackled in a later Technical Review (rather than waiting for a new standard, that will take ages).
The proposal that was being discussed is N2073.
The bad part of it is that you will not get that, not even with the newest c++0x compilers. You will have to wait. In the mean time, you will have to compromise between the uniqueness of definitions in header-only libraries and the cost of compilation.
As far as I know, no. Headers are an inherent part of C++ as a language. Don't forget that forward declaration allows the compiler to merely include a function pointer to a compiled object/function without having to include the whole function (which you can get around by declaring a function inline (if the compiler feels like it).
If you really, really, really hate making headers, write a perl-script to autogenerate them, instead. I'm not sure I'd recommend it though.
It's completely possible to develop without header files. One can include a source file directly:
#include "MyModule.c"
The major issue with this is one of circular dependencies (ie: in C you must declare a function before calling it). This is not an issue if you design your code completely top-down, but it can take some time to wrap ones head around this sort of design pattern if you're not used to it.
If you absolutely must have circular dependencies, one may want to consider creating a file specifically for declarations and including it before everything else. This is a little inconvenient, but still less pollution than having a header for every C file.
I am currently developing using this method for one of my major projects. Here is a breakdown of advantages I've experienced:
Much less file pollution in your source tree.
Faster build times. (Only one object file is produced by the compiler, main.o)
Simpler make files. (Only one object file is produced by the compiler, main.o)
No need to "make clean". Every build is "clean".
Less boiler plate code. Less code = less potential bugs.
I've discovered that Gish (a game by Cryptic Sea, Edmund McMillen) used a variation on this technique inside its own source code.
You can carefully lay out your functions so that all of the dependent functions are compiled after their dependencies, but as Nils implied, that is not practical.
Catalin (forgive the missing diacritical marks) also suggested a more practical alternative of defining your methods in the header files. This can actually work in most cases.. especially if you have guards in your header files to make sure they are only included once.
I personally think that header files + declaring functions is much more desirable for 'getting your head around' new code, but that is a personal preference I suppose...
You can do without headers. But, why spend effort trying to avoid carefully worked out best practices that have been developed over many years by experts.
When I wrote basic, I quite liked line numbers. But, I wouldn't think of trying to jam them into C++, because that's not the C++ way. The same goes for headers... and I'm sure other answers explain all the reasoning.
For practical purposes no, it's not possible. Technically, yes, you can. But, frankly, it's an abuse of the language, and you should adapt to the language. Or move to something like C#.
It is best practice to use the header files, and after a while it will grow into you.
I agree that having only one file is easier, but It also can leed to bad codeing.
some of these things, althoug feel awkward, allow you to get more then meets the eye.
as an example think about pointers, passing parameters by value/by reference... etc.
for me the header files allow-me to keep my projects properly structured
Learn to recognize that header files are a good thing. They separate how codes appears to another user from the implementation of how it actually performs its operations.
When I use someone's code I do now want to have to wade through all of the implementation to see what the methods are on a class. I care about what the code does, not how it does it.
This has been "revived" thanks to a duplicate...
In any case, the concept of a header is a worthy one, i.e. separate out the interface from the implementation detail. The header outlines how you use a class / method, and not how it does it.
The downside is the detail within headers and all the workarounds necessary. These are the main issues as I see them:
dependency generation. When a header is modified, any source file that includes this header requires recompilation. The issue is of course working out which source files actually use it. When a "clean" build is performed it is often necessary to cache the information in some kind of dependency tree for later.
include guards. Ok, we all know how to write these but in a perfect system it would not be necessary.
private details. Within a class, you must put the private details into the header. Yes, the compiler needs to know the "size" of the class, but in a perfect system it would be able to bind this in a later phase. This leads to all kinds of workaround like pImpl and using abstract base classes even when you only have one implementation just because you want to hide a dependency.
The perfect system would work with
separate class definition and declaration
A clear bind between these two so the compiler would know where a class declaration and its definition are, and would know what the size of a class.
You declare using class rather than pre-processor #include. The compiler knows where to find a class. Once you have done "using class" you can use that class name without qualifying it.
I'd be interested to know how D does it.
With regards to whether you can use C++ without headers, I would say no you need them for abstract base classes and standard library. Aside from that you could get by without them, although you probably would not want to.
Can I write C++ code without headers
Read more about C++, e.g. the Programming using C++ book then the C+11 standard n3337.
Yes, because the preprocessor is (conceptually) generating code without headers.
If your C++ compiler is GCC and you are compiling your translation unit foo.cc consider running g++ -O -Wall -Wextra -C -E foo.cc > foo.ii; the emitted file foo.ii does not contain any preprocessor directive, and could be compiled with g++ -O foo.ii -o foo-bin into a foo-bin executable (at least on Linux). See also Advanced Linux Programming
On Linux, the following C++ file
// file ex.cc
extern "C" long write(int fd, const void *buf, size_t count);
extern "C" long strlen(const char*);
extern "C" void perror(const char*);
int main (int argc, char**argv)
{
if (argc>1)
write(1, argv[1], strlen(argv[1]);
else
write(1, __FILE__ " has no argument",
sizeof(__FILE__ " has no argument"));
if (write(1, "\n", 1) <= 0) {
perror(__FILE__);
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
could be compiled using GCC as g++ ex.cc -O ex-bin into an executable ex-bin which, when executed, would show something.
In some cases, it is worthwhile to generate some C++ code with another program
(perhaps SWIG, ANTLR, Bison, RefPerSys, GPP, or your own C++ code generator) and configure your build automation tool (e.g. ninja-build or GNU make) to handle such a situation. Notice that the source code of GCC 10 has a dozen of C++ code generators.
With GCC, you might sometimes consider writing your own GCC plugin to analyze your (or others) C++ code (e.g. at the GIMPLE level). See also (in fall 2020) CHARIOT and DECODER European projects. You could also consider using the Clang static analyzer or Frama-C++.
Historically hearder files have been used for two reasons.
To provides symbols when compiling a program that wants to used a
library or a additional file.
To hide part of the implementing; keep things private.
For example say you have a function you don't want exposed to other
parts of your program, but want to use in your implementation. In that
case, you would write the function in the CPP file, but leave it out
of the header file. You can do this with variables and anything that
would want to keep private in the impregnation that you don't want
exposed to conumbers of that source code. In other programming
lanugases there is a "public" keyword that allows module parts to be
kept from being exposed to other parts of your program. In C and C++
no such facility exists at afile level, so header files are used
intead.
Header files are not perfect. Useing '#include' just copies the contents
of what ever file you provide. Single quotes for the current working
tree and < and > for system installed headers. In CPP for system
installed std components the '.h' is omitted; just another way C++
likes to do its own thing. If you want to give '#include' any kind of
file, it will be included. It really isn't a module system like Java,
Python, and most other programming lanuages have. Since headers are
not modules some extra steps need to be taken to get similar function
out of them. The Prepossesser (the thing that works with all the
#keywords) will blindly include what every you state is needed to be
consumed in that file, but C or C++ want to have your symbals or
implications defined only one in compilation. If you use a library, no
it main.cpp, but in the two files that main includes, then you only
want that library included once and not twice. Standard Library
components are handled special, so you don't need to worry about using
the same C++ include everywhere. To make it so that the first time the
Prepossesser sees your library it doesn't include it again, you need
to use a heard guard.
A heard guard is the simplest thing. It looks like this:
#ifndef LIBRARY_H
#define LIBRARY_H
// Write your definitions here.
#endif
It is considered good to comment the ifndef like this:
#endif // LIBRARY_H
But if you don't do the comment the compiler wont care and it wont
hurt anthing.
All #ifndef is doing is checking whether LIBRARY_H is equal to 0;
undefined. When LIBRARY_H is 0, it provides what comes before the
#endif.
Then #define LIBRARY_H sets LIBRARY_H to 1, so the next time the
Preprocessor sees #ifndef LIBRARY_H, it wont provide the same contents
again.
(LIBRARY_H should be what ever the file name is and then _ and the
extension. This is not going break anything if you don't write the
same thing, but you should be consistent. At least put the file name
for the #ifndef. Otherwise it might get confusing what guards are for
what.)
Really nothing fancy going on here.
Now you don't want to use header files.
Great, say you don't care about:
Having things private by excluding them from header files
You don't intend to used this code in a library. If you ever do, it
may be easier to go with headers now so you don't have to reorganise
your code into headers later.
You don't want to repeat yourself once in a header file and then in
a C++ file.
The purpose of hearder files can seem ambiguous and if you don't care
about people telling out it's wrong for imaginary reasons, then save
your hands and don't bother repeating yourself.
How to include only hearder files
Do
#ifndef THING_CPP
#define THING_CPP
#include <iostream>
void drink_me() {
std::cout << "Drink me!" << std::endl;
}
#endif // THING_CPP
for thing.cpp.
And for main.cpp do
#include "thing.cpp"
int main() {
drink_me();
return 0;
}
then compile.
Basically just name your included CPP file with the CPP extension and
then treat it like a header file but write out the implementations in
that one file.