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*. h or *. hpp for your C++ headers class definitions I've always used a * h file for my class definitions, but after reading some boost library code, I realised they all use * hpp I've always had an aversion to that file extension, I think mainly be
c - What mean file with extension h. in? - Stack Overflow Typically, a h in file is a header template that is filled in to become the actual header by a configure script based on the outcome of several tests for features present on the target platform
Cannot open include file: stdio. h - Visual Studio Community 2017 . . . NOTE: the #include for <stdio h> and <tchar h> both have the red squiggle line underneath, and says "cannot open source file" Tried: I tried removing the last two lines, but then I got more errors Tried: Since many suggested that stdafx h is not required, I tried removing just the first line, #include "stdafx h"
c++ - Visual studio is unable to find assert. h - Stack Overflow I can find files like: * cassert h Really? In C, it is usually assert h In C++, this is wrapped into cassert (without suffix) cassert h looks like a strange mix of this Out of curiosity, I did a find -iname "*assert*" -print in Microsoft Visual Studio 12 0 VC include and found exactly assert h and cassert