I have a problem where I have several header files, and I need to include each of them in each other. Obviously, this cannot be done, because when I compile, the error "include nested too deeply" is thrown - as this essentially asks the compiler to enter an infinite include loop.
I could fix it using void pointers, but this seems like bad coding practice to me.
Here is an example of what I am trying to do, to aid understanding:
File-A:
#include "File-B"
#include "File-C"
class A
{
public: B* p_B;
public: C* p_C;
};
File-B:
#include "File-A"
#include "File-C"
class B
{
public: A* p_A;
public: C* p_C;
};
File-C:
#include "File-B"
class C
{
public: B* p_B;
};
This just shows where each class declaration is needed. Surely there is a better solution to void*
.
EDIT: I am already using include guards, this code is just to help you see what I am trying to do.