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Home/ Questions/Q 8440595
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T08:19:57+00:00 2026-06-10T08:19:57+00:00

I’m working on a project where I need the following structure: The 2 CPP

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I’m working on a project where I need the following structure:
enter image description here

The 2 CPP files contain classes, those classes need naked functions that are in H File 1. The classes and the nakeds need variables in H File 2.

I can split the CPP files so that they use 2 separate file that contain the nakes and the variables they need. But I prefer to use this structure.

It looks like that the compiler skips the #ifndef command, I made a test for the problem:

Main:

#include <iostream>

//1>CPPFile2.obj : error LNK2005: "bool Test1" (?Test1@@3_NA) already defined in CPPFile1.obj
//1>CPPFile2.obj : error LNK2005: "bool Test2" (?Test2@@3_NA) already defined in CPPFile1.obj

int main()
{
}

CPPFile 1:

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

#include "HFile1.h"

CPPFile 2:

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

#include "HFile2.h"

HFile 1:

#include "HFile2.h"

#pragma once
#ifndef Name1
#define Name1

//Use test1, this workes fine
//Use test2, this workes fine

#endif

HFile 2:

#pragma once
#ifndef Name2
#define Name2

bool Test1 = false;
bool Test2 = false;

#endif

How is it possible that the #ifndef #define #endif structure doesn’t work properly?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T08:19:58+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 8:19 am

    Your problem is that the second header is defining the variables, not just declaring them. There must be a single definition in the program and thus compilation fails. This is unrelated to include guards, as include guards only protect within a single translation unit. In your case, each one of the .cpp files includes the header and thus define the same variables separately.

    The solution would be to only declare the variables in the header and define them in a single translation unit:

    #ifndef Name2
    #define Name2
    extern bool Test1;
    extern bool Test2;
    #endif
    // single .cpp
    bool Test1 = false;
    bool Test2 = false;
    

    Although there is some code smell around the whole thing. You might want to redesign your solution. The use of global variables is in most cases not a good solution.

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