The LPC #include directive:
Syntax: #include
Alternate: #include "file.h"
Note: the '#include "file.h"' form looks for file.h in the current directory.
The '#include ' form looks for file.h in one of the standard
system include directories (on TMI these directories are /include and
/local/include).
For those that know C, the LPC #include statement is identical to C's
#include statement. For those that don't know C, the #include statement
is a way to textually include one file into another. Putting a statement
'#include "file.h" in a file gives the same effect as if you had simply
typed the contents of file.h directly into the file at the point where you
had the #include statement. Included files are recompiled each time the
object that include's them is recompiled. If the included file contains
variables or functions of the same name as variables in the file doing
the including, then a duplicate-name error will occur at compile time
(in the same way that the error would occur if you simply typed in file.h
rather than using #include).