If you are using gcc then you can use the -E option to only output preprocessed code. It's quite enlightening to see what actually get fed to the compiler.
@Viper Indeed. And each .cpp file combined with it's header includes becomes an object file (file.o or file.obj). After all files have been compiled (i.e. converted into object files) then the linker will bundle them into an executable.
@Viper Can you predict what will happen if you put a function with implementation in a header file (as opposed to only its declaration), and have that header file included by multiple .cpp files?
@Viper Indeed! And the linker then needs to collect the functions into one executable but it will encounter a function that has more than one implementation.
@Abhijit not simple, you can still have complex C++ code, just without templates :)
object code contains compiled code (actual instruction) and some additional headers which allows linker to find functions and global variables from different compilation units (.cpp files) and to bind them togather
If the content of a header file is simply copy/pasted then the c(pp) file will have only the function declaration at the top when it is compiled right? Does something happen with this in the linker or what?
@MladenJanković: A big reason why C++ compilation takes quite a bit of time is because compilers will apply rather aggressive optimizations before producing the binary
@Viper A C++ Header file should have a preprocessor directive to prevent multiple inclusion in a translation unit. To a linker, this will be considered as a declaration, but as long as there is one unique definition that it needs to map, its usually not a problem.
@Viper: Function declaration are required during compilation. You do not need a definition to compile a function which references the function. During linking time all references are mapped and resolved with an implementation which may be present in another translation unit or a seperate .lib file
@Viper: Why we need a header file, a good example is the standard library functions. The implementations are present in a dll or so but when compiling your program you only need to include any of the standard header files which do not have the implementations of the standard library functions.
@StackedCrooked I meant as more of a general principle. Things like no universal base, value types which are first-class citizens, proper deterministic destruction support
it's hard to find a "C++ successor" which doesn't have even worse failings of it's own