I haven't tried or checked but from what I remember it behaves this way:
1. If you invoke it on a use of symbol (not its definition/declaration, in your
case it would be some call of `handle()` in the code), it will jump to its
definition.
2. If you invoke in on a definition of a symbol (in your case on the line with
`handle` function definition in your cpp), it jumps to its declaration in hpp.
3. If you invoke in on a declaration of a symbol (in your case on the line with
`handle` function declaration in your hpp), it jumps to its definition in cpp.
The logic is about this - (1) takes you to the definition which is probably
what you want, by (2)/(3) you can quickly toggle between definition/declaration.
If there are multiple symbols found, it does the same, it just pops up a list
with either definitions or declarations, depending on where you invoked it
based on the 3 cases above. So I guess in your example you invoked it on the
`handle`
```
Err::Severity CLI::Option_string::handle(string_view o, string_view v, size_t,
const string&){
```
in your cpp file so you got just the declarations.
(Or there's really some bug of course :-)
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