Possible Duplicate:
C++ include and import difference
Can someone explain the difference and where may I use one versus the other?
Possible Duplicate:
C++ include and import difference
Can someone explain the difference and where may I use one versus the other?
#include includes a file in the current compilation unit.#import does not exist in the C++ standard.This answer was true in '14. However, the C++ standard has evolved since then and import now exists. Without the #.
#import imports information (types, functions, variables etc) from .lib file. It's non-standard directive.#include includes header file.See these topics:
#include cause the referenced file to be "copy-and-pasted" at the current position during the preprocessing phase.
#import is not in the C++ standard, but is an extension provided by some compiler. There is no consensus about what it does. For GCC, it is equivalent to #include but try to ensure that the file has not already been included. For MSVC, it may have another meaning.
It is best to avoid #import (sadly) if you want to write code portable to multiple compilers.