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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T05:41:42+00:00 2026-05-11T05:41:42+00:00

What do you think is best practice when creating public header files in C++?

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What do you think is best practice when creating public header files in C++?

  1. Should header files contain no, brief or massive documentation? I’ve seen everything from almost no documentation (relying on some external documentation) to large specifications of invariants, valid parameters, return values etc. I’m not sure exactly what I prefer, large documentation is nice since you’ve always access to it from your editor, on the other hand a header file with very brief documentation can often show a complete interface on one or two pages of text giving a much better overview of what’s possible to do with a class.

  2. Let’s say I go with something like brief or massive documentation. I want something similar to javadoc where I document return values, parameters etc. What’s the best convention for that in c++? As far as I can remember doxygen does good stuff with java doc-style documentation, but are there any other conventions and tools for this I should be aware of before going for javadoc style documentation?

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  1. 2026-05-11T05:41:43+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 5:41 am

    Usually I put documentation for the interface (parameters, return value, what the function does) in the interface file (.h), and the documentation for the implementation (how the function does) in the implementation file (.c, .cpp, .m).

    I write an overview of the class just before its declaration, so the reader has immediate basic information.

    The tool I use is Doxygen.

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