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This questions concerns mostly Unix/Linux style C++ development. I see that many C++ libraries store their header files in a "include" folder and source files in an "src" folder. For the sake of conformance I adopted this in my own code. But it is not clear to me whether this should be done for application code as well. I've seen a few cases where a flat directory structure is used for that. What would be the recommended approach?

10 Answers 10

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I also separate them, but not strictly on the extension, but on the access of the file.

Suppose you have a module that manages customer information and uses 2 classes to do this: Customer, CustomerValidityChecker. Also suppose that other parts in your application only need to know about the Customer class, and that the CustomerValidityChecker is only used by the Customer class to perform some checking. Based on these assumptions I store the files like this:

Public folder (or include folder):

  • customer.h

Private folder (or source folder):

  • customer.cpp
  • customervaliditychecker.h
  • customervaliditychecker.cpp

That way, it becomes immediately clear for callers of your module which parts are accessible (public) and which parts aren't.

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  • +1, I use the very same separation at work. When you interact daily with at least a dozen components, it comes handy that they don't clog the API files with those you don't care about. May 28, 2010 at 6:49
  • I wonder too if it influences build times a small degree. For example in Visual Studio's Additional Include Directories, having a smaller size folder with includes would that in general make things a bit peppier than a folder with many other header files not meant to be included outside the library?
    – jxramos
    Mar 14, 2017 at 19:52
  • what do you mean by public or private - like public to the webserver by users, or public to the rest of your code? classes may have private methods and data as well as private classes and data. also, between lib and src, which one are you saying is private vs public? I am confused by the answer.
    – ahnbizcad
    Nov 6, 2020 at 21:49
  • @ahnbizcad, I mean public to the rest of the code that must not know the internals of the implementation of class (of which you make the header public). For example: if your application uses a GUI library, headers of classes to make dialogs must be public, but the .cpp files must be private. Also classes that are purely used internally by the GUI (like e.g. interaction with the graphics device, a pixel-painter, ...) should probably remain private. Similarly, there are often cases where you want to make an interface public, but the implementation of the interface private.
    – Patrick
    Feb 9, 2023 at 7:33
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We have a build system that auto-generates our makefiles. One thing it does is recursively descend any subdirectories and build them as libraries, linking them together with the main directory's objects to make the application. (In practice, these "subdirectories" are usually symbolic links.) Libraries are static unless the directory name ends in ".so". One thing that's nice about this is that a full build of our system, which has many executables, doesn't have to repeatedly compile the common libraries.

However, as a result of this, there's no separation of headers and sources. And it has never been a problem. Honestly, I think it's better this way because headers and source files have commonality of location, and you can grab a directory and know you got everything you need to use it. It also works great with Subversion's "externals" feature, and similar features in other VCSs.

One last place where an include/src separation fails is if you use any code generators, such as flex, bison, or gengetopts. Figuring out where these tools should put their outputs so they get built is tricky if you've spread things out.

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    Honestly I like to have the header and source files together as well. Also in one Visual Studio filter, so that header and source files are together. May 27, 2010 at 19:56
  • Agree. If you have a fine granular modularization, then the last thing you want to have is more directories than files. If you split include and src then you need even a further include/libname directory because you would otherwise need insane #include "blabla/include/header.h" directives. Jan 14, 2020 at 10:15
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It makes sense to separate them for shared libraries because they may be distributed in a compiled form without the source. I've seen projects that separate out "public" headers (headers that may be accessed from code outside your project or library) while leaving "private" headers and source files in the same directory. I think it's good to use a consistent approach whether you're writing shared library or application level code because you never know when you may want to turn something that you've written at the application level into a lower level library that is shared by multiple projects.

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A lot depends on the size of project involved. Up to a few dozen files or so, keeping them in one directory tends to be more convenient. For a bigger application that includes hundreds or thousands of files, you start to look for ways to separate them (though in the projects I've worked on, it was done more on functional lines than src/include). In between those, it's probably open to question.

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  • Yes, it's when the number of files is getting big that I start to want extra organization. It's funny because it probably doesn't really have much benefit. Maybe it only satisfies some sort categorizing obsession :) May 27, 2010 at 20:00
  • Why not just use more src sub-directories to keep the files-per-directory smaller? =)
    – Elliott
    Sep 5, 2021 at 9:14
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I don't do this; there seems little advantage in it. Since headers tend to have a different extension from source files, you can have your editor show them separately if you really feel the need -- Visual Studio does this by default, but I disable it since I prefer seeing them together

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    There's an obvious advantage for clients of the library: they only need to be aware of one include directory; this reduces their maintenance overhead and reduces the risk of header name collisions... Implementors also benefit; they can change the layout of their src directory without worrying about breaking library clients.
    – Dan O
    Jan 10, 2014 at 0:37
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There is no clear advantage to either in my view. I finally decided to keep program and header files together because my editor (Visual SlickEdit) happens to provide additional referential features when they are not separated.

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  • Funny how one's tools can influence many aspects of a project. I agree that organizing the code in a way that is compatible with the IDE is usually a good idea. May 27, 2010 at 20:07
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I almost always create include and src folders to split up my source code. I think it makes the folder less cluttered and files are easier to find in my IDE. But I think this is just a matter of taste.

Either method is valid. It depends on the coding style you want to follow how you do this.

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  • My motivation is similar in that I dislike the clutter. May 27, 2010 at 20:03
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Bottom Line: sources and headers that are still changing go in /src. Code that has crystallised should go in /lib & /include (actually you could keep all .libs and their .hs in /lib).

  • Keep own sources and headers together, provided they are (a) specific to this project or (b) have not yet been factored out as a shared library.
  • Once certain sources in the main project have been factored out as a (relatively stable) library, place the .a or .lib into /lib, and its public interface header into /include.
  • All third party libraries and their public interface headers also go into /lib & /include.

As others note, it is often more compatible for tools / IDEs to access .h/.c from one folder. But from an organisational view it can be useful to separate changing local code from stable lib code.

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I place include (header) and source files in the same directory (folder). I create different folders for different themes. I get frustrated when trying to find header files (while debugging and also for researching). In some shops, there are only two folders: source and includes. These directories tend to grow exponentially. Reusing code becomes a nightmare at best.

IMHO, I believe organizing by theme is better. Each theme folder should build into at least one library. Different projects can easily include the themes by searching or including the folders. The projects only need to include the libraries. Smart build engines can list the theme folders as dependencies. This speeds up the build process.

The theme organization also adds a bit of safety to the project. Accidental damage to files (such as removing the wrong ones or replacing with different versions) is reduced since files are located in different directories. Deletion of files in the "Person" folder will not affect files in the "Shape" folder.

This is just my opinion, Your Mileage May Vary.

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  • This is similar to the codebase at my current work. The main application consists of many utilities which each have their own svn repository. The main repository collects all of it through svn externals. May 27, 2010 at 20:05
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We have a build system which use this rule. This build system is sconspiracy a set of scripts to configure SCons and dedicated to the C++ world. You can see an example which use this tools : fw4spl

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