What is the difference between using #include<filename> and #include<filename.h> in c++ which of the two is used and why it is used
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C++ only include-files not found in the C standard never used Files inherited by the C Standard became The difference is that names not defined as macros in C are found within namespace Now those were the difference. Why would you use `filename.h` ?
Why should you use `cfilename` ?
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
Those without the .h is C++ header files while those with .h are C header files. This only applies to the standard header files in C++. If you are including your own files or files that is not part of standard C++ you need to always write the complete file name (which can be anything). |
||
|
|
|
|
If you are talking about the standard libraries (because otherwise it wont work at all), the difference is
is the correct way to call the header according the the C++ standard, while
is deprecated (in the C++ standard, but still necessary according to the C99 standard) and came along with the rest of the C baggage. So you should use:
not:
|
||||||||
|
|
|
The There is no magic going on, the first looks for a file called 'foo.h' and the second for a file called 'foo'. They are two different files in the file system. The standard just changed the name of the file that should be included. In most compilers the old headers are still there for backwards compatibility (and compatibility with C), but modern C++ programs that want to follow the standard should not use them. In the case of standard C headers, the C++ versions have a c at the beginning, so the C header
becomes
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
The old standard used the This was done so that the standard library stuff could all be placed in the std namespace. Older code, which had no concept of namespaces would still work since the New code should always use the |
||||||||||
|
