I have looked in The C++ Programming Language to try to find the answer to this. When I #include "my_dir/my_header.hpp" in a header, where does it look for this file? Is it relative to the header, relative to the source file that included it, or something else?
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Implementation defined. See what is the difference between #include <filename> and #include “filename”. |
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It is relative to both the current source file and to any search paths given (-I for gcc). |
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The complete search path may depend on the compiler. In Visual Studio:
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It depends on what syntax you use in the #include directive:
Quoted form : This form instructs the preprocessor to look for include files in the same directory of the file that contains the #include statement, and then in the directories of any files that include (#include) that file. The preprocessor then searches along the path specified by the /I compiler option, then along paths specified by the INCLUDE environment variable. Angle-bracket form : This form instructs the preprocessor to search for include files first along the path specified by the /I compiler option, then, when compiling from the command line, along the path specified by the INCLUDE environment variable. The path-spec is a filename optionally preceded by a directory specification. The filename must name an existing file. The syntax of the path-spec depends on the operating system on which the program is compiled. This information should be in the documentation for your specific C++ Preprocessor Reference, the above is taken from this article on MSDN which has more on the subject. |
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Its implementation defined. Those #include"my_dir/xxy.hpp" on a file (for example foo.h) are relative to the file (foo.h and my_dir would be on the same level at the directory hierarchy). With some (most?) compilers, you can use a flag to use these < > (#include I know that gcc / g++ provides the -I flag. So you could use g++ -I /home [...] indicating that the xxy.hpp file is located in the /home/my_dir/ directory. I havent used any other C/C++ compiler in a while now. |
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