This question concerns C or C++, but it may be relevant to other languages.
When constructing a minimal, complete, and verifiable example (MCVE), occasionally the question asker does not include the relevant include files. People familiar with the language will have no problem substituting it in; my issue is that it's annoying to do so. I've been making the habit of editing them in, such as this one, only if it's a complete snippet (and not code fragments). The documentation for the MCVE doesn't directly say that the program has to be compilable; normally this is pointed out in the comments. It says:
Eliminate any issues that aren't relevant to the problem. If your question isn’t about a compiler error, ensure that there are no compile-time errors. ...
No compile-time errors implies that the program needs to compile, but it isn't explicit. I believe that this habit of not including the header files comes from other forums where they're considered noise, but a complete snippet should have them.
Is this a problem, and if so how do we encourage people to post paste-able code?
Example of some possible canonical questions that deal with the subject matter.
For larger projects:
using System;
in C#,imports System;
or something to that effect in Java). Getting back to C - if I'm having a problem withprintf
because I can't understand how to pass a pointer, how would#include <std.io>
help the question be more clear? Wouldn't that be just noise? Please notice that C and C++ are not my forte so forgive me if I said something that is obviously wrong - I'm just trying to understand the question.