> And from my understanding #include copies and pastes code from another source file to this source file.
This is where you're wrong (or not entirely right(*))
A function like this from cstdio would be in the header file as
extern fgets ( char * str, int num, FILE * stream );
Your compiler writer put the code for this into a library.
1 2 3
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char *fgets ( char * str, int num, FILE * stream ) {
// do something
}
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The compiler normally links the standard libraries for you, but when you start using 3rd party code, then libraries become pretty standard fare as something you have to cope with.
You can always open a .h file in your code editor.
If you see lots of functions ending with ;, then you'll need the associated library.
If you see lots of templates and inline functions, then you might only need to include the header.
(*) Some C++ header files which are heavily templated have all the code in the header files, and the template expansion creates the version of the code appropriate for you.
Eg, when you say
std::vector<int> foo;