include-what-you-use
For every symbol (type, function variable, or macro) that you use in foo.cc, either foo.cc or foo.h should #include a .h file that exports the declaration of that symbol. The main goal of include-what-you-use is to remove superfluous #includes, both by figuring out what #includes are not actually needed for this file (for both .cc and .h files), and by replacing #includes with forward-declares when possible.
- Name
- include-what-you-use
- Programs
fix_includes.pyinclude-what-you-useiwyu_tool.py
- Homepage
- Version
- 0.25
- License
- Maintainers
- Platforms
- i686-cygwin
- x86_64-cygwin
- x86_64-darwin
- aarch64-darwin
- i686-freebsd
- x86_64-freebsd
- aarch64-freebsd
- x86_64-solaris
- aarch64-linux
- armv5tel-linux
- armv6l-linux
- armv7a-linux
- armv7l-linux
- i686-linux
- loongarch64-linux
- m68k-linux
- microblaze-linux
- microblazeel-linux
- mips-linux
- mips64-linux
- mips64el-linux
- mipsel-linux
- powerpc-linux
- powerpc64-linux
- powerpc64le-linux
- riscv32-linux
- riscv64-linux
- s390-linux
- s390x-linux
- x86_64-linux
- aarch64-netbsd
- armv6l-netbsd
- armv7a-netbsd
- armv7l-netbsd
- i686-netbsd
- m68k-netbsd
- mipsel-netbsd
- powerpc-netbsd
- riscv32-netbsd
- riscv64-netbsd
- x86_64-netbsd
- i686-openbsd
- x86_64-openbsd
- x86_64-redox
- Defined
- Source