I have a source that tells me:
The source file that defines a function should include the header that contains that function’s declaration. That way the compiler will verify that the definition and declaration are consistent.
I'm not sure how this is right, what type of "consistency" are we talking about? Because if the definition and declaration weren't consistent in return type or argument type/number, the compiler would just think I was declaring a separate function and wouldn't verify anything at all.
E.g. If I had a header file test.h:
void func();
And a source file testsource.cpp:
#include <iostream>
#include "test.h"
using namespace std;
void func(int x){
cout << "Hello StackOverflow" << endl;
}
If I were to run this program the compiler would just think func() and func(int) were different functions and wouldn't throw up a fuss about consistency. What type of consistency is it referring to?
void func()
andvoid funct(int)
would be considered two completely separate functions, after their name is manglednamespace Bob { void f(); }
and then in sourcevoid Bob::f(int x) {}
won't compile.header
file for just containing function definitions. The compiler would possibly be fuzzy about not implementing such function