The tooltip on the downvote arrow reads:
This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful
This provides a clue to understanding the downvotes on your question. In particular, the first phrase there, the one about "does not show any research effort".
Having simply searched for the error message; either:
unresolved external symbol
or
LNK2019
you would have ended up either on the official documentation or this MSDN FAQ or a veritable cornucopia of Stack Overflow questions, including this one and this other one.
Any or all of these would have given you your answer. Especially that last Stack Overflow question, of which your question was closed as a duplicate.
Alternatively, you could have looked up the name of the function which you were trying to call (ImageList_Create
), which would have almost certainly gotten you to the official MSDN documentation. Like all functions documented on MSDN, there is a table at the bottom, titled "Requirements", which summarizes the versions of Windows on which the function is available, the header file you need to include, and the library or DLL that you need to reference in order to call the function.
Combined with the knowledge that LNK2019 is a linker error indicating that the linker could not find an external symbol (i.e., the function that you were trying to call), you could have easily pieced together the solution to your problem: add a reference to Comctl32.lib
to your project's build settings so that the linker could find the ImageList_Create
function, which it exports.
In other words: you should have been able to find the answer to this question yourself, with a minimal amount of research effort. As such, at least two users found your question to be worthy of a downvote.
To be clear, that does not necessarily mean that you should not have asked the question. If you genuinely couldn't find the answer, even after doing some research, then it is fair to ask the question. You did—after all—get your answer. However, it is also fair to expect some downvotes, since other Stack Overflow users will likely consider the question to be exhibiting a lack of research effort and thus not useful to others in the future.
There is another [related] problem, as is clear from reading the comments: you were operating with an insufficient understanding the C++ build process—namely, that simply including the headers is sufficient. This is not true. Like C, C++ programs are built in multiple steps. Simplifying slightly, first the code file is run through the preprocessor (inserting headers as necessary), then the code file is compiled into an object file, and finally the object file is linked. In order to link, the linker needs to be able to find all externally referenced functions. Not knowing this perhaps made it harder for you to find the answer yourself. But your inability to explain what you did not know (the fact that you lacked a minimal understanding of the language/environment that you were using) also made it difficult for others to understand your question. The question being "unclear" is another common reason for downvotes. Like it or not, Stack Overflow simply isn't an effective resource for programmers who lack a minimal understanding of their language/environment, and questions that demonstrate such lack of knowledge are likely to be unclear to others and thus receive downvotes.