Usually, Boost.Build handles implicit dependendies completely
automatically. For example, for C++ files, all #include
statements are found and handled. The only aspect where user help might be
needed is implicit dependency on generated files.
By default, Boost.Build handles such dependencies within one main target. For example, assume that main target "app" has two sources, "app.cpp" and "parser.y". The latter source is converted into "parser.c" and "parser.h". Then, if "app.cpp" includes "parser.h", Boost.Build will detect this dependency. Moreover, since "parser.h" will be generated into a build directory, the path to that directory will automatically be added to the include path.
Making this mechanism work across main target boundaries is possible, but
imposes certain overhead. For that reason, if there is implicit dependency
on files from other main targets, the <implicit-dependency>
feature must be used, for example:
lib parser : parser.y ; exe app : app.cpp : <implicit-dependency>parser ;
The above example tells the build system that when scanning all sources of "app" for implicit-dependencies, it should consider targets from "parser" as potential dependencies.