show/hide this revision's text 2 Fix trivial typo

Say I have a C program which is broken to a set of *.c and *.h files. If code from one file uses functions from another file, where shoud should I include the header file? Inside the *.c file that used the function, or inside the header of that file?

E.g. file foo.c includes foo.h, which contains all declarations for foo.c; same for bar.c and bar.h. Function foo1() inside foo.c calls bar1(), which is declared in bar.h and defined in bar.c. Now the question is, should I include bar.h inside foo.h, or inside foo.c?

What would be a good set of rules-of-thumb for such issues?

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How to structure #includes in C

Say I have a C program which is broken to a set of *.c and *.h files. If code from one file uses functions from another file, where shoud I include the header file? Inside the *.c file that used the function, or inside the header of that file?

E.g. file foo.c includes foo.h, which contains all declarations for foo.c; same for bar.c and bar.h. Function foo1() inside foo.c calls bar1(), which is declared in bar.h and defined in bar.c. Now the question is, should I include bar.h inside foo.h, or inside foo.c?

What would be a good set of rules-of-thumb for such issues?