I am maintaing a legacy MFC application and I see a pattern exactly like the one on Object-Oriented Programming under Windows book, where the relevant part is:
Persview.h
#ifndef _DEBUG // debug version in persview.cpp
inline CPersDoc* CPersView::GetDocument()
{ return (CPersDoc*)m_pDocument; }
#endif
Persview.cpp
#ifdef _DEBUG
CPersDoc* CPersView::GetDocument() // non-debug version is inline
{
ASSERT(m_pDocument->IsKindOf(RUNTIME_CLASS(CPersView)));
return (CPersView*)m_pDocument;
}
#endif //_DEBUG
I see the pattern widely applied if I search for it on Internet, so I presume it is wizard generated code.
My question is: Is there any advantage or another good reason for the release version being inlined on the .h file and the debug on the .cpp file? Why not put both on the same file next to each other?