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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T00:38:24+00:00 2026-05-20T00:38:24+00:00

I’m wondering a bit about this templating business. In C and C++ it is

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I’m wondering a bit about this templating business.

In C and C++ it is very common to put declarations in header files and definitions in source files, and keep the two completely separate. However, this doesn’t even seem to be possible (in any great way) when it comes to templates, and as we all know, templates are a great tool.

Also, Boost is mostly headers, so this is a real issue. Is separating headers and source still a good idea in C++, or should I just not rely heavily on templates?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T00:38:25+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 12:38 am

    Instantiating a template is costly at compile time but virtualy free at runtime. Basically, everytime you use a new template type, the compiler has to generate the code for that new type, that’s why the code is in a header, so that the compiler have access to the code later.

    Putting all your code in a .cpp lets the compiler compile that code only once which greatly speeds up compilation. You could in theory write all your code in headers, it will work fine, but it will take forever to compile very large projects. Also, as soon as you will change one line anywhere, you will have to rebuild everything.

    Now you might ask, how comes the STL and BOOST are not so slow? That’s where precompiled headers come to the rescue. PCHs let the compiler do the most costly work only once. This works well with code that won’t change often like libraries, but its effect is totally nullified for code that changes a lot as you will have to recompile the whole set of precompiled headers everytime. The compiler also use a couple of tricks to avoid recompiling all template code in every compilation unit.

    Also note that C++0x will introduce explicit mechanisms to better control template instantiation. You will be able to explicitly instantiate templates and, most importantly, prevent instanciation in some compilation units. However, most of that work is already being done by most compilers without our knowledge.

    So, the rule of thumb is, put as much code (and include directives) as possible in your .cpp. If you can’t, well, you can’t.

    My advice would be: don’t template just for the heck of it. If you have to template, be careful and be aware that you are in fact choosing between speed of compilation and usability the template will bring.

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