> Using directives are problematic because they inject an unbounded amount of names into the current scope. If the directive is at namespace level (even inside a .cpp file), this is likely to make matters worse by affecting a larger portion of the code; in any case, injecting a potentially unbounded number of overloads into the current scope could result in compiler errors (annoying), linker errors (more annoying), or even run-time errors (extremely annoying, once spotted). “using” directives make code more fragile in the event of future inclusion of new header files - possibly from 3rd party libraries - that introduce conflicting names and/or further “using” directives. Typing “std::” is a relatively small effort compared to the benefit it provides in terms of robustness and safety.