6 Jim Tcl v0.76+ - reference manual for the Jim Tcl scripting language
16 jimsh -e '<immediate-script>'
21 * <<CommandIndex,Command Reference>>
22 * <<OperatorPrecedence,Operator Precedence>>
23 * <<BuiltinVariables, Builtin Variables>>
24 * <<BackslashSequences, Backslash Sequences>>
28 Jim Tcl is a small footprint reimplementation of the Tcl scripting language.
29 The core language engine is compatible with Tcl 8.5+, while implementing
30 a significant subset of the Tcl 8.6 command set, plus additional features
31 available only in Jim Tcl.
33 Some notable differences with Tcl 8.5/8.6 are:
35 1. Object-based I/O (aio), but with a Tcl-compatibility layer
36 2. I/O: Support for sockets and pipes including udp, unix domain sockets and IPv6
38 4. Support for references (`ref`/`getref`/`setref`) and garbage collection
39 5. Builtin dictionary type (`dict`) with some limitations compared to Tcl 8.6
40 6. `env` command to access environment variables
41 7. Operating system features: `os.fork`, `os.wait`, `os.uptime`, `signal`, `alarm`, `sleep`
42 8. Much better error reporting. `info stacktrace` as a replacement for '$errorInfo', '$errorCode'
43 9. Support for "static" variables in procedures
44 10. Threads and coroutines are not supported
45 11. Command and variable traces are not supported
46 12. Built-in command line editing
47 13. Expression shorthand syntax: +$(...)+
48 14. Modular build allows many features to be omitted or built as dynamic, loadable modules
49 15. Highly suitable for use in an embedded environment
50 16. Support for UDP, IPv6, Unix-Domain sockets in addition to TCP sockets
54 Changes between 0.76 and 0.77
55 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
56 1. Add support for `aio sync`
58 Changes between 0.75 and 0.76
59 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
60 1. Add support for `file link`
61 2. `glob` now supports the '--tails' option
62 3. Add support for `string cat`
63 4. Allow `info source` to add source info
65 Changes between 0.74 and 0.75
66 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
67 1. `binary`, `pack` and `unpack` now support floating point
68 2. `file copy` '-force' handles source and target as the same file
69 3. `format` now supports +%b+ for binary conversion
70 4. `lsort` now supports '-unique' and '-real'
71 5. Add support for half-close with `aio close` ?r|w?
72 6. Add `socket pair` for a bidirectional pipe
73 7. Add '--random-hash' to randomise hash tables for greater security
74 8. `dict` now supports 'for', 'values', 'incr', 'append', 'lappend', 'update', 'info' and 'replace'
75 9. `file stat` no longer requires the variable name
77 Changes between 0.73 and 0.74
78 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
79 1. Numbers with leading zeros are treated as decimal, not octal
81 3. Add LFS (64 bit) support for `aio seek`, `aio tell`, `aio copyto`, `file copy`
82 4. `string compare` and `string equal` now support '-length'
83 5. `glob` now supports '-directory'
85 Changes between 0.72 and 0.73
86 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
87 1. Built-in regexp now support non-capturing parentheses: (?:...)
88 2. Add `string replace`
89 3. Add `string totitle`
91 5. Add +build-jim-ext+ for easy separate building of loadable modules (extensions)
92 6. `local` now works with any command, not just procs
93 7. Add `info alias` to access the target of an alias
94 8. UTF-8 encoding past the basic multilingual plane (BMP) is supported
97 11. Most extensions are now enabled by default
98 12. Add support for namespaces and the `namespace` command
101 Changes between 0.71 and 0.72
102 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
103 1. procs now allow 'args' and optional parameters in any position
104 2. Add Tcl-compatible expr functions, `rand()`, `srand()` and `pow()`
105 3. Add support for the '-force' option to `file delete`
106 4. Better diagnostics when `source` fails to load a script with a missing quote or bracket
107 5. New +tcl_platform(pathSeparator)+
108 6. Add support settings the modification time with `file mtime`
109 7. `exec` is now fully supported on win32 (mingw32)
110 8. `file join`, `pwd`, `glob` etc. now work for mingw32
111 9. Line editing is now supported for the win32 console (mingw32)
112 10. Add `aio listen` command
114 Changes between 0.70 and 0.71
115 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
116 1. Allow 'args' to be renamed in procs
117 2. Add +$(...)+ shorthand syntax for expressions
118 3. Add automatic reference variables in procs with +&var+ syntax
119 4. Support +jimsh --version+
120 5. Additional variables in +tcl_platform()+
121 6. `local` procs now push existing commands and `upcall` can call them
122 7. Add `loop` command (TclX compatible)
123 8. Add `aio buffering` command
124 9. `info complete` can now return the missing character
125 10. `binary format` and `binary scan` are now (optionally) supported
126 11. Add `string byterange`
127 12. Built-in regexp now support non-greedy repetition (*?, +?, ??)
131 Tcl stands for 'tool command language' and is pronounced
132 'http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/american_english/tickle[tickle]'.
133 It is actually two things: a language and a library.
135 First, Tcl is a simple textual language, intended primarily for
136 issuing commands to interactive programs such as text editors,
137 debuggers, illustrators, and shells. It has a simple syntax and is also
138 programmable, so Tcl users can write command procedures to provide more
139 powerful commands than those in the built-in set.
141 Second, Tcl is a library package that can be embedded in application
142 programs. The Tcl library consists of a parser for the Tcl language,
143 routines to implement the Tcl built-in commands, and procedures that
144 allow each application to extend Tcl with additional commands specific
145 to that application. The application program generates Tcl commands and
146 passes them to the Tcl parser for execution. Commands may be generated
147 by reading characters from an input source, or by associating command
148 strings with elements of the application's user interface, such as menu
149 entries, buttons, or keystrokes.
151 When the Tcl library receives commands it parses them into component
152 fields and executes built-in commands directly. For commands implemented
153 by the application, Tcl calls back to the application to execute the
154 commands. In many cases commands will invoke recursive invocations of the
155 Tcl interpreter by passing in additional strings to execute (procedures,
156 looping commands, and conditional commands all work in this way).
158 An application program gains three advantages by using Tcl for its command
159 language. First, Tcl provides a standard syntax: once users know Tcl,
160 they will be able to issue commands easily to any Tcl-based application.
161 Second, Tcl provides programmability. All a Tcl application needs
162 to do is to implement a few application-specific low-level commands.
163 Tcl provides many utility commands plus a general programming interface
164 for building up complex command procedures. By using Tcl, applications
165 need not re-implement these features.
167 Third, Tcl can be used as a common language for communicating between
168 applications. Inter-application communication is not built into the
169 Tcl core described here, but various add-on libraries, such as the Tk
170 toolkit, allow applications to issue commands to each other. This makes
171 it possible for applications to work together in much more powerful ways
172 than was previously possible.
174 Fourth, Jim Tcl includes a command processor, +jimsh+, which can be
175 used to run standalone Tcl scripts, or to run Tcl commands interactively.
177 This manual page focuses primarily on the Tcl language. It describes
178 the language syntax and the built-in commands that will be available
179 in any application based on Tcl. The individual library procedures are
180 described in more detail in separate manual pages, one per procedure.
182 JIMSH COMMAND INTERPRETER
183 -------------------------
184 A simple, but powerful command processor, +jimsh+, is part of Jim Tcl.
185 It may be invoked in interactive mode as:
189 or to process the Tcl script in a file with:
193 It may also be invoked to execute an immediate script with:
199 Interactive mode reads Tcl commands from standard input, evaluates
200 those commands and prints the results.
203 Welcome to Jim version 0.73, Copyright (c) 2005-8 Salvatore Sanfilippo
206 . lsort [info commands p*]
207 package parray pid popen proc puts pwd
208 . foreach i {a b c} {
215 invalid command name "bad"
219 If +jimsh+ is configured with line editing (it is by default) and a VT-100-compatible
220 terminal is detected, Emacs-style line editing commands are available, including:
221 arrow keys, +\^W+ to erase a word, +\^U+ to erase the line, +^R+ for reverse incremental search
222 in history. Additionally, the +h+ command may be used to display the command history.
224 Command line history is automatically saved and loaded from +~/.jim_history+
226 In interactive mode, +jimsh+ automatically runs the script +~/.jimrc+ at startup
231 The central data structure in Tcl is an interpreter (C type 'Jim_Interp').
232 An interpreter consists of a set of command bindings, a set of variable
233 values, and a few other miscellaneous pieces of state. Each Tcl command
234 is interpreted in the context of a particular interpreter.
236 Some Tcl-based applications will maintain multiple interpreters
237 simultaneously, each associated with a different widget or portion of
238 the application. Interpreters are relatively lightweight structures.
239 They can be created and deleted quickly, so application programmers should
240 feel free to use multiple interpreters if that simplifies the application.
244 Tcl supports only one type of data: strings. All commands, all arguments
245 to commands, all command results, and all variable values are strings.
247 Where commands require numeric arguments or return numeric results,
248 the arguments and results are passed as strings. Many commands expect
249 their string arguments to have certain formats, but this interpretation
250 is up to the individual commands. For example, arguments often contain
251 Tcl command strings, which may get executed as part of the commands.
252 The easiest way to understand the Tcl interpreter is to remember that
253 everything is just an operation on a string. In many cases Tcl constructs
254 will look similar to more structured constructs from other languages.
255 However, the Tcl constructs are not structured at all; they are just
256 strings of characters, and this gives them a different behaviour than
257 the structures they may look like.
259 Although the exact interpretation of a Tcl string depends on who is doing
260 the interpretation, there are three common forms that strings take:
261 commands, expressions, and lists. The major sections below discuss
262 these three forms in more detail.
266 The Tcl language has syntactic similarities to both the Unix shells
267 and Lisp. However, the interpretation of commands is different
268 in Tcl than in either of those other two systems.
269 A Tcl command string consists of one or more commands separated
270 by newline characters or semi-colons.
271 Each command consists of a collection of fields separated by
272 white space (spaces or tabs).
273 The first field must be the name of a command, and the
274 additional fields, if any, are arguments that will be passed to
275 that command. For example, the command:
279 has three fields: the first, `set`, is the name of a Tcl command, and
280 the last two, 'a' and '22', will be passed as arguments to
281 the `set` command. The command name may refer either to a built-in
282 Tcl command, an application-specific command bound in with the library
283 procedure 'Jim_CreateCommand', or a command procedure defined with the
284 `proc` built-in command.
286 Arguments are passed literally as text strings. Individual commands may
287 interpret those strings in any fashion they wish. The `set` command,
288 for example, will treat its first argument as the name of a variable
289 and its second argument as a string value to assign to that variable.
290 For other commands arguments may be interpreted as integers, lists,
291 file names, or Tcl commands.
293 Command names should normally be typed completely (e.g. no abbreviations).
294 However, if the Tcl interpreter cannot locate a command it invokes a
295 special command named `unknown` which attempts to find or create the
298 For example, at many sites `unknown` will search through library
299 directories for the desired command and create it as a Tcl procedure if
300 it is found. The `unknown` command often provides automatic completion
301 of abbreviated commands, but usually only for commands that were typed
304 It's probably a bad idea to use abbreviations in command scripts and
305 other forms that will be re-used over time: changes to the command set
306 may cause abbreviations to become ambiguous, resulting in scripts that
311 If the first non-blank character in a command is +\#+, then everything
312 from the +#+ up through the next newline character is treated as
313 a comment and ignored. When comments are embedded inside nested
314 commands (e.g. fields enclosed in braces) they must have properly-matched
315 braces (this is necessary because when Tcl parses the top-level command
316 it doesn't yet know that the nested field will be used as a command so
317 it cannot process the nested comment character as a comment).
319 GROUPING ARGUMENTS WITH DOUBLE-QUOTES
320 -------------------------------------
321 Normally each argument field ends at the next white space, but
322 double-quotes may be used to create arguments with embedded space.
324 If an argument field begins with a double-quote, then the argument isn't
325 terminated by white space (including newlines) or a semi-colon (see below
326 for information on semi-colons); instead it ends at the next double-quote
327 character. The double-quotes are not included in the resulting argument.
328 For example, the command
330 set a "This is a single argument"
332 will pass two arguments to `set`: 'a' and 'This is a single argument'.
334 Within double-quotes, command substitutions, variable substitutions,
335 and backslash substitutions still occur, as described below. If the
336 first character of a command field is not a quote, then quotes receive
337 no special interpretation in the parsing of that field.
339 GROUPING ARGUMENTS WITH BRACES
340 ------------------------------
341 Curly braces may also be used for grouping arguments. They are similar
342 to quotes except for two differences. First, they nest; this makes them
343 easier to use for complicated arguments like nested Tcl command strings.
344 Second, the substitutions described below for commands, variables, and
345 backslashes do *not* occur in arguments enclosed in braces, so braces
346 can be used to prevent substitutions where they are undesirable.
348 If an argument field begins with a left brace, then the argument ends
349 at the matching right brace. Tcl will strip off the outermost layer
350 of braces and pass the information between the braces to the command
351 without any further modification. For example, in the command
353 set a {xyz a {b c d}}
355 the `set` command will receive two arguments: 'a'
358 When braces or quotes are in effect, the matching brace or quote need
359 not be on the same line as the starting quote or brace; in this case
360 the newline will be included in the argument field along with any other
361 characters up to the matching brace or quote. For example, the `eval`
362 command takes one argument, which is a command string; `eval` invokes
363 the Tcl interpreter to execute the command string. The command
370 will assign the value '22' to 'a' and '33' to 'b'.
372 If the first character of a command field is not a left
373 brace, then neither left nor right
374 braces in the field will be treated specially (except as part of
375 variable substitution; see below).
377 COMMAND SUBSTITUTION WITH BRACKETS
378 ----------------------------------
379 If an open bracket occurs in a field of a command, then command
380 substitution occurs (except for fields enclosed in braces). All of the
381 text up to the matching close bracket is treated as a Tcl command and
382 executed immediately. Then the result of that command is substituted
383 for the bracketed text. For example, consider the command
387 When the `set` command has only a single argument, it is the name of a
388 variable and `set` returns the contents of that variable. In this case,
389 if variable 'b' has the value 'foo', then the command above is equivalent
394 Brackets can be used in more complex ways. For example, if the variable
395 'b' has the value 'foo' and the variable 'c' has the value 'gorp',
398 set a xyz[set b].[set c]
400 is equivalent to the command
405 A bracketed command may contain multiple commands separated by newlines
406 or semi-colons in the usual fashion. In this case the value of the last
407 command is used for substitution. For example, the command
412 is equivalent to the command
417 If a field is enclosed in braces then the brackets and the characters
418 between them are not interpreted specially; they are passed through to
419 the argument verbatim.
421 VARIABLE SUBSTITUTION WITH $
422 ----------------------------
423 The dollar sign (+$+) may be used as a special shorthand form for
424 substituting variable values. If +$+ appears in an argument that isn't
425 enclosed in braces then variable substitution will occur. The characters
426 after the +$+, up to the first character that isn't a number, letter,
427 or underscore, are taken as a variable name and the string value of that
428 variable is substituted for the name.
430 For example, if variable 'foo' has the value 'test', then the command
434 is equivalent to the command
438 There are two special forms for variable substitution. If the next
439 character after the name of the variable is an open parenthesis, then
440 the variable is assumed to be an array name, and all of the characters
441 between the open parenthesis and the next close parenthesis are taken as
442 an index into the array. Command substitutions and variable substitutions
443 are performed on the information between the parentheses before it is
446 For example, if the variable 'x' is an array with one element named
447 'first' and value '87' and another element named '14' and value 'more',
450 set a xyz$x(first)zyx
452 is equivalent to the command
456 If the variable 'index' has the value '14', then the command
458 set a xyz$x($index)zyx
460 is equivalent to the command
464 For more information on arrays, see VARIABLES AND ARRAYS below.
466 The second special form for variables occurs when the dollar sign is
467 followed by an open curly brace. In this case the variable name consists
468 of all the characters up to the next curly brace.
470 Array references are not possible in this form: the name between braces
471 is assumed to refer to a scalar variable. For example, if variable
472 'foo' has the value 'test', then the command
476 is equivalent to the command
481 Variable substitution does not occur in arguments that are enclosed in
482 braces: the dollar sign and variable name are passed through to the
485 The dollar sign abbreviation is simply a shorthand form. +$a+ is
486 completely equivalent to +[set a]+; it is provided as a convenience
489 SEPARATING COMMANDS WITH SEMI-COLONS
490 ------------------------------------
491 Normally, each command occupies one line (the command is terminated by a
492 newline character). However, semi-colon (+;+) is treated as a command
493 separator character; multiple commands may be placed on one line by
494 separating them with a semi-colon. Semi-colons are not treated as
495 command separators if they appear within curly braces or double-quotes.
497 BACKSLASH SUBSTITUTION
498 ----------------------
499 Backslashes may be used to insert non-printing characters into command
500 fields and also to insert special characters like braces and brackets
501 into fields without them being interpreted specially as described above.
503 The backslash sequences understood by the Tcl interpreter are
504 listed below. In each case, the backslash
505 sequence is replaced by the given character:
506 [[BackslashSequences]]
517 Carriage-return (0xd).
540 +{backslash}<space>+::
541 Space ( ): doesn't terminate argument.
544 Semi-colon: doesn't terminate command.
549 +{backslash}<newline>+::
550 Nothing: this joins two lines together
551 into a single line. This backslash feature is unique in that
552 it will be applied even when the sequence occurs within braces.
554 +{backslash}{backslash}+::
555 Backslash ('{backslash}').
558 The digits +'ddd'+ (one, two, or three of them) give the octal value of
559 the character. Note that Jim supports null characters in strings.
562 +{backslash}u\{nnn\}+::
563 +{backslash}Unnnnnnnn+::
564 The UTF-8 encoding of the unicode codepoint represented by the hex digits, +'nnnn'+, is inserted.
565 The 'u' form allows for one to four hex digits.
566 The 'U' form allows for one to eight hex digits.
567 The 'u\{nnn\}' form allows for one to eight hex digits, but makes it easier to insert
568 characters UTF-8 characters which are followed by a hex digit.
570 For example, in the command
574 the second argument to `set` will be +{x[ yza+.
576 If a backslash is followed by something other than one of the options
577 described above, then the backslash is transmitted to the argument
578 field without any special processing, and the Tcl scanner continues
579 normal processing with the next character. For example, in the
584 The first argument to `set` will be +{backslash}*a+ and the second
585 argument will be +{backslash}{foo+.
587 If an argument is enclosed in braces, then backslash sequences inside
588 the argument are parsed but no substitution occurs (except for
589 backslash-newline): the backslash
590 sequence is passed through to the argument as is, without making
591 any special interpretation of the characters in the backslash sequence.
592 In particular, backslashed braces are not counted in locating the
593 matching right brace that terminates the argument.
599 the second argument to `set` will be +{backslash}{abc+.
601 This backslash mechanism is not sufficient to generate absolutely
602 any argument structure; it only covers the
603 most common cases. To produce particularly complicated arguments
604 it is probably easiest to use the `format` command along with
605 command substitution.
607 STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS
608 ------------------------------------
610 Many string and list commands take one or more 'index' parameters which
611 specify a position in the string relative to the start or end of the string/list.
613 The index may be one of the following forms:
616 A simple integer, where '0' refers to the first element of the string
619 +integer+integer+ or::
621 The sum or difference of the two integers. e.g. +2+3+ refers to the 5th element.
622 This is useful when used with (e.g.) +$i+1+ rather than the more verbose
626 The last element of the string or list.
629 The 'nth-from-last' element of the string or list.
633 1. A command is just a string.
634 2. Within a string commands are separated by newlines or semi-colons
635 (unless the newline or semi-colon is within braces or brackets
637 3. A command consists of fields. The first field is the name of the command.
638 The other fields are strings that are passed to that command as arguments.
639 4. Fields are normally separated by white space.
640 5. Double-quotes allow white space and semi-colons to appear within
642 Command substitution, variable substitution, and backslash substitution
643 still occur inside quotes.
644 6. Braces defer interpretation of special characters.
645 If a field begins with a left brace, then it consists of everything
646 between the left brace and the matching right brace. The
647 braces themselves are not included in the argument.
648 No further processing is done on the information between the braces
649 except that backslash-newline sequences are eliminated.
650 7. If a field doesn't begin with a brace then backslash,
651 variable, and command substitution are done on the field. Only a
652 single level of processing is done: the results of one substitution
653 are not scanned again for further substitutions or any other
654 special treatment. Substitution can
655 occur on any field of a command, including the command name
656 as well as the arguments.
657 8. If the first non-blank character of a command is a +\#+, everything
658 from the +#+ up through the next newline is treated as a comment
663 The second major interpretation applied to strings in Tcl is
664 as expressions. Several commands, such as `expr`, `for`,
665 and `if`, treat one or more of their arguments as expressions
666 and call the Tcl expression processors ('Jim_ExprLong',
667 'Jim_ExprBoolean', etc.) to evaluate them.
669 The operators permitted in Tcl expressions are a subset of
670 the operators permitted in C expressions, and they have the
671 same meaning and precedence as the corresponding C operators.
672 Expressions almost always yield numeric results
673 (integer or floating-point values).
674 For example, the expression
680 Tcl expressions differ from C expressions in the way that
681 operands are specified, and in that Tcl expressions support
682 non-numeric operands and string comparisons.
684 A Tcl expression consists of a combination of operands, operators,
687 White space may be used between the operands and operators and
688 parentheses; it is ignored by the expression processor.
689 Where possible, operands are interpreted as integer values.
691 Integer values may be specified in decimal (the normal case) or in
692 hexadecimal (if the first two characters of the operand are '0x').
693 Note that Jim Tcl does *not* treat numbers with leading zeros as octal.
695 If an operand does not have one of the integer formats given
696 above, then it is treated as a floating-point number if that is
697 possible. Floating-point numbers may be specified in any of the
698 ways accepted by an ANSI-compliant C compiler (except that the
699 'f', 'F', 'l', and 'L' suffixes will not be permitted in
700 most installations). For example, all of the
701 following are valid floating-point numbers: 2.1, 3., 6e4, 7.91e+16.
703 If no numeric interpretation is possible, then an operand is left
704 as a string (and only a limited set of operators may be applied to
707 1. Operands may be specified in any of the following ways:
709 2. As a numeric value, either integer or floating-point.
711 3. As a Tcl variable, using standard '$' notation.
712 The variable's value will be used as the operand.
714 4. As a string enclosed in double-quotes.
715 The expression parser will perform backslash, variable, and
716 command substitutions on the information between the quotes,
717 and use the resulting value as the operand
719 5. As a string enclosed in braces.
720 The characters between the open brace and matching close brace
721 will be used as the operand without any substitutions.
723 6. As a Tcl command enclosed in brackets.
724 The command will be executed and its result will be used as
727 Where substitutions occur above (e.g. inside quoted strings), they
728 are performed by the expression processor.
729 However, an additional layer of substitution may already have
730 been performed by the command parser before the expression
731 processor was called.
733 As discussed below, it is usually best to enclose expressions
734 in braces to prevent the command parser from performing substitutions
737 For some examples of simple expressions, suppose the variable 'a' has
738 the value 3 and the variable 'b' has the value 6. Then the expression
739 on the left side of each of the lines below will evaluate to the value
740 on the right side of the line:
745 {word one} < "word $a" 0
747 The valid operators are listed below, grouped in decreasing order
749 [[OperatorPrecedence]]
750 +int() double() round() abs(), rand(), srand()+::
751 Unary functions (except rand() which takes no arguments)
752 * +'int()'+ converts the numeric argument to an integer by truncating down.
753 * +'double()'+ converts the numeric argument to floating point.
754 * +'round()'+ converts the numeric argument to the closest integer value.
755 * +'abs()'+ takes the absolute value of the numeric argument.
756 * +'rand()'+ returns a pseudo-random floating-point value in the range (0,1).
757 * +'srand()'+ takes an integer argument to (re)seed the random number generator. Returns the first random number from that seed.
759 +sin() cos() tan() asin() acos() atan() sinh() cosh() tanh() ceil() floor() exp() log() log10() sqrt()+::
760 Unary math functions.
761 If Jim is compiled with math support, these functions are available.
764 Unary minus, unary plus, bit-wise NOT, logical NOT. None of these operands
765 may be applied to string operands, and bit-wise NOT may be
766 applied only to integers.
769 Power. e.g. 'x^y^'. If Jim is compiled with math support, supports doubles and
770 integers. Otherwise supports integers only. (Note that the math-function form
771 has the same highest precedence)
774 Multiply, divide, remainder. None of these operands may be
775 applied to string operands, and remainder may be applied only
779 Add and subtract. Valid for any numeric operands.
782 Left and right shift, left and right rotate. Valid for integer operands only.
785 Boolean less, greater, less than or equal, and greater than or equal.
786 Each operator produces 1 if the condition is true, 0 otherwise.
787 These operators may be applied to strings as well as numeric operands,
788 in which case string comparison is used.
791 Boolean equal and not equal. Each operator produces a zero/one result.
792 Valid for all operand types. *Note* that values will be converted to integers
793 if possible, then floating point types, and finally strings will be compared.
794 It is recommended that 'eq' and 'ne' should be used for string comparison.
797 String equal and not equal. Uses the string value directly without
798 attempting to convert to a number first.
801 String in list and not in list. For 'in', result is 1 if the left operand (as a string)
802 is contained in the right operand (as a list), or 0 otherwise. The result for
803 +{$a ni $list}+ is equivalent to +{!($a in $list)}+.
806 Bit-wise AND. Valid for integer operands only.
809 Bit-wise OR. Valid for integer operands only.
812 Bit-wise exclusive OR. Valid for integer operands only.
815 Logical AND. Produces a 1 result if both operands are non-zero, 0 otherwise.
816 Valid for numeric operands only (integers or floating-point).
819 Logical OR. Produces a 0 result if both operands are zero, 1 otherwise.
820 Valid for numeric operands only (integers or floating-point).
823 If-then-else, as in C. If +'x'+
824 evaluates to non-zero, then the result is the value of +'y'+.
825 Otherwise the result is the value of +'z'+.
826 The +'x'+ operand must have a numeric value, while +'y'+ and +'z'+ can
829 See the C manual for more details on the results
830 produced by each operator.
831 All of the binary operators group left-to-right within the same
832 precedence level. For example, the expression
838 The +&&+, +||+, and +?:+ operators have 'lazy evaluation', just as
839 in C, which means that operands are not evaluated if they are not
840 needed to determine the outcome. For example, in
844 only one of +[a]+ or +[b]+ will actually be evaluated,
845 depending on the value of +$v+.
847 All internal computations involving integers are done with the C
848 type 'long long' if available, or 'long' otherwise, and all internal
849 computations involving floating-point are done with the C type
852 When converting a string to floating-point, exponent overflow is
853 detected and results in a Tcl error.
854 For conversion to integer from string, detection of overflow depends
855 on the behaviour of some routines in the local C library, so it should
856 be regarded as unreliable.
857 In any case, overflow and underflow are generally not detected
858 reliably for intermediate results.
860 Conversion among internal representations for integer, floating-point,
861 and string operands is done automatically as needed.
862 For arithmetic computations, integers are used until some
863 floating-point number is introduced, after which floating-point is used.
868 yields the result 1, while
871 5 / ( [string length "abcd"] + 0.0 )
873 both yield the result 1.25.
875 String values may be used as operands of the comparison operators,
876 although the expression evaluator tries to do comparisons as integer
877 or floating-point when it can.
878 If one of the operands of a comparison is a string and the other
879 has a numeric value, the numeric operand is converted back to
880 a string using the C 'sprintf' format specifier
881 '%d' for integers and '%g' for floating-point values.
882 For example, the expressions
887 both evaluate to 1. The first comparison is done using integer
888 comparison, and the second is done using string comparison after
889 the second operand is converted to the string '18'.
891 In general it is safest to enclose an expression in braces when
892 entering it in a command: otherwise, if the expression contains
893 any white space then the Tcl interpreter will split it
894 among several arguments. For example, the command
898 results in three arguments being passed to `expr`: +$a+,
899 \+, and +$b+. In addition, if the expression isn't in braces
900 then the Tcl interpreter will perform variable and command substitution
901 immediately (it will happen in the command parser rather than in
902 the expression parser). In many cases the expression is being
903 passed to a command that will evaluate the expression later (or
904 even many times if, for example, the expression is to be used to
905 decide when to exit a loop). Usually the desired goal is to re-do
906 the variable or command substitutions each time the expression is
907 evaluated, rather than once and for all at the beginning. For example,
910 for {set i 1} $i<=10 {incr i} {...} ** WRONG **
912 is probably intended to iterate over all values of +i+ from 1 to 10.
913 After each iteration of the body of the loop, `for` will pass
914 its second argument to the expression evaluator to see whether or not
915 to continue processing. Unfortunately, in this case the value of +i+
916 in the second argument will be substituted once and for all when the
917 `for` command is parsed. If +i+ was 0 before the `for`
918 command was invoked then the second argument of `for` will be +0\<=10+
919 which will always evaluate to 1, even though +i+ eventually
920 becomes greater than 10. In the above case the loop will never
921 terminate. Instead, the expression should be placed in braces:
923 for {set i 1} {$i<=10} {incr i} {...} ** RIGHT **
925 This causes the substitution of 'i'
926 to be delayed; it will be re-done each time the expression is
927 evaluated, which is the desired result.
931 The third major way that strings are interpreted in Tcl is as lists.
932 A list is just a string with a list-like structure
933 consisting of fields separated by white space. For example, the
938 is a list with four elements or fields.
939 Lists have the same basic structure as command strings, except
940 that a newline character in a list is treated as a field separator
941 just like space or tab. Conventions for braces and quotes
942 and backslashes are the same for lists as for commands. For example,
947 is a list with three elements: +a+, +b c+, and +d e {f g h}+.
949 Whenever an element is extracted from a list, the same rules about
950 braces and quotes and backslashes are applied as for commands. Thus in
951 the example above when the third element is extracted from the list,
956 (when the field was extracted, all that happened was to strip off
957 the outermost layer of braces). Command substitution and
958 variable substitution are never
959 made on a list (at least, not by the list-processing commands; the
960 list can always be passed to the Tcl interpreter for evaluation).
962 The Tcl commands `concat`, `foreach`, `lappend`, `lindex`, `linsert`,
963 `list`, `llength`, `lrange`, `lreplace`, `lsearch`, and `lsort` allow
964 you to build lists, extract elements from them, search them, and perform
965 other list-related functions.
967 Advanced list commands include `lrepeat`, `lreverse`, `lmap`, `lassign`, `lset`.
972 A new addition to Tcl 8.5 is the ability to expand a list into separate
973 arguments. Support for this feature is also available in Jim.
975 Consider the following attempt to exec a list:
980 This will attempt to exec a command named "ls -l", which will clearly not
981 work. Typically eval and concat are required to solve this problem, however
982 it can be solved much more easily with +\{*\}+.
986 This will expand the following argument into individual elements and then evaluate
987 the resulting command.
989 Note that the official Tcl syntax is +\{*\}+, however +\{expand\}+ is retained
990 for backward compatibility with experimental versions of this feature.
994 Tcl provides two commands that support string matching using regular
995 expressions, `regexp` and `regsub`, as well as `switch -regexp` and
998 Regular expressions may be implemented one of two ways. Either using the system's C library
999 POSIX regular expression support, or using the built-in regular expression engine.
1000 The differences between these are described below.
1002 *NOTE* Tcl 7.x and 8.x use perl-style Advanced Regular Expressions (+ARE+).
1004 POSIX Regular Expressions
1005 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1006 If the system supports POSIX regular expressions, and UTF-8 support is not enabled,
1007 this support will be used by default. The type of regular expressions supported are
1008 Extended Regular Expressions (+ERE+) rather than Basic Regular Expressions (+BRE+).
1009 See REG_EXTENDED in the documentation.
1011 Using the system-supported POSIX regular expressions will typically
1012 make for the smallest code size, but some features such as UTF-8
1013 and +{backslash}w+, +{backslash}d+, +{backslash}s+ are not supported, and null characters
1014 in strings are not supported.
1016 See regex(3) and regex(7) for full details.
1018 Jim built-in Regular Expressions
1019 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1020 The Jim built-in regular expression engine may be selected with +./configure --with-jim-regexp+
1021 or it will be selected automatically if UTF-8 support is enabled.
1023 This engine supports UTF-8 as well as some +ARE+ features. The differences with both Tcl 7.x/8.x
1024 and POSIX are highlighted below.
1026 1. UTF-8 strings and patterns are both supported
1027 2. Supported character classes: +[:alnum:]+, +[:digit:]+ and +[:space:]+
1028 3. Supported shorthand character classes: +{backslash}w+ = +[:alnum:]+, +{backslash}d+ = +[:digit:],+ +{backslash}s+ = +[:space:]+
1029 4. Character classes apply to ASCII characters only
1030 5. Supported constraint escapes: +{backslash}m+ = +{backslash}<+ = start of word, +{backslash}M+ = +{backslash}>+ = end of word
1031 6. Backslash escapes may be used within regular expressions, such as +{backslash}n+ = newline, +{backslash}uNNNN+ = unicode
1032 7. Support for the +?+ non-greedy quantifier. e.g. +*?+
1033 8. Support for non-capturing parentheses +(?:...)+
1034 9. Jim Tcl considers that both patterns and strings end at a null character (+\x00+)
1038 Each command produces two results: a code and a string. The
1039 code indicates whether the command completed successfully or not,
1040 and the string gives additional information. The valid codes are
1041 defined in jim.h, and are:
1044 This is the normal return code, and indicates that the command completed
1045 successfully. The string gives the command's return value.
1048 Indicates that an error occurred; the string gives a message describing
1052 Indicates that the `return` command has been invoked, and that the
1053 current procedure (or top-level command or `source` command)
1054 should return immediately. The
1055 string gives the return value for the procedure or command.
1058 Indicates that the `break` command has been invoked, so the
1059 innermost loop should abort immediately. The string should always
1063 Indicates that the `continue` command has been invoked, so the
1064 innermost loop should go on to the next iteration. The string
1065 should always be empty.
1068 Indicates that a signal was caught while executing a commands.
1069 The string contains the name of the signal caught.
1070 See the `signal` and `catch` commands.
1073 Indicates that the command called the `exit` command.
1074 The string contains the exit code.
1076 Tcl programmers do not normally need to think about return codes,
1077 since +JIM_OK+ is almost always returned. If anything else is returned
1078 by a command, then the Tcl interpreter immediately stops processing
1079 commands and returns to its caller. If there are several nested
1080 invocations of the Tcl interpreter in progress, then each nested
1081 command will usually return the error to its caller, until eventually
1082 the error is reported to the top-level application code. The
1083 application will then display the error message for the user.
1085 In a few cases, some commands will handle certain `error` conditions
1086 themselves and not return them upwards. For example, the `for`
1087 command checks for the +JIM_BREAK+ code; if it occurs, then `for`
1088 stops executing the body of the loop and returns +JIM_OK+ to its
1089 caller. The `for` command also handles +JIM_CONTINUE+ codes and the
1090 procedure interpreter handles +JIM_RETURN+ codes. The `catch`
1091 command allows Tcl programs to catch errors and handle them without
1092 aborting command interpretation any further.
1094 The `info returncodes` command may be used to programmatically map between
1095 return codes and names.
1099 Tcl allows you to extend the command interface by defining
1100 procedures. A Tcl procedure can be invoked just like any other Tcl
1101 command (it has a name and it receives one or more arguments).
1102 The only difference is that its body isn't a piece of C code linked
1103 into the program; it is a string containing one or more other
1106 The `proc` command is used to create a new Tcl command procedure:
1108 +*proc* 'name arglist ?statics? body'+
1110 The new command is named +'name'+, and it replaces any existing command
1111 there may have been by that name. Whenever the new command is
1112 invoked, the contents of +'body'+ will be executed by the Tcl
1115 +'arglist'+ specifies the formal arguments to the procedure.
1116 It consists of a list, possibly empty, of the following
1117 argument specifiers:
1120 Required Argument - A simple argument name.
1123 Optional Argument - A two-element list consisting of the
1124 argument name, followed by the default value, which will
1125 be used if the corresponding argument is not supplied.
1128 Reference Argument - The caller is expected to pass the name of
1129 an existing variable. An implicit `upvar 1 'origname' 'name'` is done
1130 to make the variable available in the proc scope.
1133 Variable Argument - The special name +'args'+, which is
1134 assigned all remaining arguments (including none) as a list. The
1135 variable argument may only be specified once. Note that
1136 the syntax +args newname+ may be used to retain the special
1137 behaviour of +'args'+ with a different local name. In this case,
1138 the variable is named +'newname'+ rather than +'args'+.
1140 When the command is invoked, a local variable will be created for each of
1141 the formal arguments to the procedure; its value will be the value
1142 of corresponding argument in the invoking command or the argument's
1145 Arguments with default values need not be specified in a procedure
1146 invocation. However, there must be enough actual arguments for all
1147 required arguments, and there must not be any extra actual arguments
1148 (unless the Variable Argument is specified).
1150 Actual arguments are assigned to formal arguments as in left-to-right
1151 order with the following precedence.
1153 1. Required Arguments (including Reference Arguments)
1154 2. Optional Arguments
1155 3. Variable Argument
1157 The following example illustrates precedence. Assume a procedure declaration:
1159 proc p {{a A} args b {c C} d} {...}
1161 This procedure requires at least two arguments, but can accept an unlimited number.
1162 The following table shows how various numbers of arguments are assigned.
1163 Values marked as +-+ are assigned the default value.
1165 [width="40%",frame="topbot",options="header"]
1167 |Number of arguments|a|args|b|c|d
1175 When +'body'+ is being executed, variable names normally refer to local
1176 variables, which are created automatically when referenced and deleted
1177 when the procedure returns. One local variable is automatically created
1178 for each of the procedure's arguments. Global variables can be
1179 accessed by invoking the `global` command or via the +::+ prefix.
1183 In addition to procedure arguments, Jim procedures may declare static variables.
1184 These variables scoped to the procedure and initialised at procedure definition.
1185 Either from the static variable definition, or from the enclosing scope.
1187 Consider the following example:
1190 jim> proc a {} {a {b 2}} {
1202 The static variable +'a'+ has no initialiser, so it is initialised from
1203 the enclosing scope with the value 1. (Note that it is an error if there
1204 is no variable with the same name in the enclosing scope). However +'b'+
1205 has an initialiser, so it is initialised to 2.
1207 Unlike a local variable, the value of a static variable is retained across
1208 invocations of the procedure.
1210 See the `proc` command for information on how to define procedures
1211 and what happens when they are invoked. See also NAMESPACES.
1213 VARIABLES - SCALARS AND ARRAYS
1214 ------------------------------
1215 Tcl allows the definition of variables and the use of their values
1216 either through '$'-style variable substitution, the `set`
1217 command, or a few other mechanisms.
1219 Variables need not be declared: a new variable will automatically
1220 be created each time a new variable name is used.
1222 Tcl supports two types of variables: scalars and arrays.
1223 A scalar variable has a single value, whereas an array variable
1224 can have any number of elements, each with a name (called
1225 its 'index') and a value.
1227 Array indexes may be arbitrary strings; they need not be numeric.
1228 Parentheses are used refer to array elements in Tcl commands.
1229 For example, the command
1233 will modify the element of 'x' whose index is 'first'
1234 so that its new value is '44'.
1236 Two-dimensional arrays can be simulated in Tcl by using indexes
1237 that contain multiple concatenated values.
1238 For example, the commands
1243 set the elements of 'a' whose indexes are '2,3' and '3,6'.
1245 In general, array elements may be used anywhere in Tcl that scalar
1246 variables may be used.
1248 If an array is defined with a particular name, then there may
1249 not be a scalar variable with the same name.
1251 Similarly, if there is a scalar variable with a particular
1252 name then it is not possible to make array references to the
1255 To convert a scalar variable to an array or vice versa, remove
1256 the existing variable with the `unset` command.
1258 The `array` command provides several features for dealing
1259 with arrays, such as querying the names of all the elements of
1260 the array and converting between an array and a list.
1262 Variables may be either global or local. If a variable
1263 name is used when a procedure isn't being executed, then it
1264 automatically refers to a global variable. Variable names used
1265 within a procedure normally refer to local variables associated with that
1266 invocation of the procedure. Local variables are deleted whenever
1267 a procedure exits. Either `global` command may be used to request
1268 that a name refer to a global variable for the duration of the current
1269 procedure (this is somewhat analogous to 'extern' in C), or the variable
1270 may be explicitly scoped with the +::+ prefix. For example
1286 ARRAYS AS LISTS IN JIM
1287 ----------------------
1288 Unlike Tcl, Jim can automatically convert between a list (with an even
1289 number of elements) and an array value. This is similar to the way Tcl
1290 can convert between a string and a list.
1301 Thus `array set` is equivalent to `set` when the variable does not
1304 The reverse is also true where an array will be converted into
1307 set a(1) one; set a(2) two
1316 Tcl 8.5 introduced the dict command, and Jim Tcl has added a version
1317 of this command. Dictionaries provide efficient access to key-value
1318 pairs, just like arrays, but dictionaries are pure values. This
1319 means that you can pass them to a procedure just as a list or a
1320 string. Tcl dictionaries are therefore much more like Tcl lists,
1321 except that they represent a mapping from keys to values, rather
1322 than an ordered sequence.
1324 You can nest dictionaries, so that the value for a particular key
1325 consists of another dictionary. That way you can elegantly build
1326 complicated data structures, such as hierarchical databases. You
1327 can also combine dictionaries with other Tcl data structures. For
1328 instance, you can build a list of dictionaries that themselves
1331 Dictionaries are values that contain an efficient, order-preserving
1332 mapping from arbitrary keys to arbitrary values. Each key in the
1333 dictionary maps to a single value. They have a textual format that
1334 is exactly that of any list with an even number of elements, with
1335 each mapping in the dictionary being represented as two items in
1336 the list. When a command takes a dictionary and produces a new
1337 dictionary based on it (either returning it or writing it back into
1338 the variable that the starting dictionary was read from) the new
1339 dictionary will have the same order of keys, modulo any deleted
1340 keys and with new keys added on to the end. When a string is
1341 interpreted as a dictionary and it would otherwise have duplicate
1342 keys, only the last value for a particular key is used; the others
1343 are ignored, meaning that, "apple banana" and "apple carrot apple
1344 banana" are equivalent dictionaries (with different string
1347 Note that in Jim, arrays are implemented as dictionaries.
1348 Thus automatic conversion between lists and dictionaries applies
1349 as it does for arrays.
1351 jim> dict set a 1 one
1353 jim> dict set a 2 two
1359 jim> dict set a 3 T three
1360 1 one 2 two 3 {T three}
1362 See the `dict` command for more details.
1366 Tcl added namespaces as a mechanism avoiding name clashes, especially in applications
1367 including a number of 3rd party components. While there is less need for namespaces
1368 in Jim Tcl (which does not strive to support large applications), it is convenient to
1369 provide a subset of the support for namespaces to easy porting code from Tcl.
1371 Jim Tcl currently supports "light-weight" namespaces which should be adequate for most
1372 purposes. This feature is currently experimental. See README.namespaces for more information
1373 and the documentation of the `namespace` command.
1375 GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION
1376 -----------------------------------------------
1377 Unlike Tcl, Jim has some sophisticated support for functional programming.
1378 These are described briefly below.
1380 More information may be found at http://wiki.tcl.tk/13847
1384 A reference can be thought of as holding a value with one level of indirection,
1385 where the value may be garbage collected when unreferenced.
1386 Consider the following example:
1388 jim> set r [ref "One String" test]
1389 <reference.<test___>.00000000000000000000>
1393 The operation `ref` creates a references to the value specified by the
1394 first argument. (The second argument is a "type" used for documentation purposes).
1396 The operation `getref` is the dereferencing operation which retrieves the value
1397 stored in the reference.
1399 jim> setref $r "New String"
1404 The operation `setref` replaces the value stored by the reference. If the old value
1405 is no longer accessible by any reference, it will eventually be automatically be garbage
1410 Normally, all values in Tcl are passed by value. As such values are copied and released
1411 automatically as necessary.
1413 With the introduction of references, it is possible to create values whose lifetime
1414 transcend their scope. To support this, case, the Jim system will periodically identify
1415 and discard objects which are no longer accessible by any reference.
1417 The `collect` command may be used to force garbage collection. Consider a reference created
1420 jim> proc f {ref value} { puts "Finaliser called for $ref,$value" }
1421 jim> set r [ref "One String" test f]
1422 <reference.<test___>.00000000000
1427 Finaliser called for <reference.<test___>.00000000000,One String
1430 Note that once the reference, 'r', was modified so that it no longer
1431 contained a reference to the value, the garbage collector discarded
1432 the value (after calling the finalizer).
1434 The finalizer for a reference may be examined or changed with the `finalize` command
1438 jim> finalize $r newf
1443 Jim provides a garbage collected `lambda` function. This is a procedure
1444 which is able to create an anonymous procedure. Consider:
1446 jim> set f [lambda {a} {{x 0}} { incr x $a }]
1453 This create an anonymous procedure (with the name stored in 'f'), with a static variable
1454 which is incremented by the supplied value and the result returned.
1456 Once the procedure name is no longer accessible, it will automatically be deleted
1457 when the garbage collector runs.
1459 The procedure may also be delete immediately by renaming it "". e.g.
1465 If Jim is built with UTF-8 support enabled (configure --enable-utf),
1466 then most string-related commands become UTF-8 aware. These include,
1467 but are not limited to, `string match`, `split`, `glob`, `scan` and
1470 UTF-8 encoding has many advantages, but one of the complications is that
1471 characters can take a variable number of bytes. Thus the addition of
1472 `string bytelength` which returns the number of bytes in a string,
1473 while `string length` returns the number of characters.
1475 If UTF-8 support is not enabled, all commands treat bytes as characters
1476 and `string bytelength` returns the same value as `string length`.
1478 Note that even if UTF-8 support is not enabled, the +{backslash}uNNNN+ and related syntax
1479 is still available to embed UTF-8 sequences.
1481 Jim Tcl supports all currently defined unicode codepoints. That is 21 bits, up to +'U+1FFFFF'.
1485 Commands such as `string match`, `lsearch -glob`, `array names` and others use string
1486 pattern matching rules. These commands support UTF-8. For example:
1488 string match a\[\ua0-\ubf\]b "a\u00a3b"
1492 +format %c+ allows a unicode codepoint to be be encoded. For example, the following will return
1493 a string with two bytes and one character. The same as +{backslash}ub5+
1497 `format` respects widths as character widths, not byte widths. For example, the following will
1498 return a string with three characters, not three bytes.
1500 format %.3s \ub5\ub6\ub7\ub8
1502 Similarly, +scan ... %c+ allows a UTF-8 to be decoded to a unicode codepoint. The following will set
1503 +'a'+ to 181 (0xb5) and +'b'+ to 65 (0x41).
1505 scan \u00b5A %c%c a b
1507 `scan %s` will also accept a character class, including unicode ranges.
1511 `string is` has *not* been extended to classify UTF-8 characters. Therefore, the following
1512 will return 0, even though the string may be considered to be alphabetic.
1514 string is alpha \ub5Test
1516 This does not affect the string classes 'ascii', 'control', 'digit', 'double', 'integer' or 'xdigit'.
1518 Case Mapping and Conversion
1519 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1520 Jim provides a simplified unicode case mapping. This means that case conversion
1521 and comparison will not increase or decrease the number of characters in a string.
1522 (Although it may change the number of bytes).
1524 `string toupper` will convert any lowercase letters to their uppercase equivalent.
1525 Any character which is not a letter or has no uppercase equivalent is left unchanged.
1526 Similarly for `string tolower` and `string totitle`.
1528 Commands which perform case insensitive matches, such as `string compare -nocase`
1529 and `lsearch -nocase` fold both strings to uppercase before comparison.
1531 Invalid UTF-8 Sequences
1532 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1533 Some UTF-8 character sequences are invalid, such as those beginning with '0xff',
1534 those which represent character sequences longer than 3 bytes (greater than U+FFFF),
1535 and those which end prematurely, such as a lone '0xc2'.
1537 In these situations, the offending bytes are treated as single characters. For example,
1538 the following returns 2.
1540 string bytelength \xff\xff
1544 If UTF-8 support is enabled, the built-in regular expression engine will be
1545 selected which supports UTF-8 strings and patterns.
1547 See REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
1551 The Tcl library provides the following built-in commands, which will
1552 be available in any application using Tcl. In addition to these
1553 built-in commands, there may be additional commands defined by each
1554 application, plus commands defined as Tcl procedures.
1556 In the command syntax descriptions below, words in +*boldface*+ are
1557 literals that you type verbatim to Tcl.
1559 Words in +'italics'+ are meta-symbols; they serve as names for any of
1560 a range of values that you can type.
1562 Optional arguments or groups of arguments are indicated by enclosing them
1563 in +?question-marks?+.
1565 Ellipses (+\...+) indicate that any number of additional
1566 arguments or groups of arguments may appear, in the same format
1567 as the preceding argument(s).
1578 Delivers the +SIGALRM+ signal to the process after the given
1579 number of seconds. If the platform supports 'ualarm(3)' then
1580 the argument may be a floating point value. Otherwise it must
1583 Note that unless a signal handler for +SIGALRM+ has been installed
1584 (see `signal`), the process will exit on this signal.
1588 +*alias* 'name args\...'+
1590 Creates a single word alias (command) for one or more words. For example,
1591 the following creates an alias for the command `info exists`.
1598 `alias` returns +'name'+, allowing it to be used with `local`.
1600 See also `proc`, `curry`, `lambda`, `local`, `info alias`, `exists -alias`
1604 +*append* 'varName value ?value value ...?'+
1606 Append all of the +'value'+ arguments to the current value
1607 of variable +'varName'+. If +'varName'+ doesn't exist,
1608 it is given a value equal to the concatenation of all the
1609 +'value'+ arguments.
1611 This command provides an efficient way to build up long
1612 variables incrementally.
1613 For example, "`append a $b`" is much more efficient than
1614 "`set a $a$b`" if +$a+ is long.
1618 +*apply* 'lambdaExpr ?arg1 arg2 \...?'+
1620 The command `apply` provides for anonymous procedure calls,
1621 similar to `lambda`, but without command name being created, even temporarily.
1623 The function +'lambdaExpr'+ is a two element list +{args body}+
1624 or a three element list +{args body namespace}+. The first element
1625 args specifies the formal arguments, in the same form as the `proc` and `lambda` commands.
1629 +*array* 'option arrayName ?arg\...?'+
1631 This command performs one of several operations on the
1632 variable given by +'arrayName'+.
1634 Note that in general, if the named array does not exist, the +'array'+ command behaves
1635 as though the array exists but is empty.
1637 The +'option'+ argument determines what action is carried out by the
1638 command. The legal +'options'+ (which may be abbreviated) are:
1640 +*array exists* 'arrayName'+::
1641 Returns 1 if arrayName is an array variable, 0 if there is
1642 no variable by that name. This command is essentially
1643 identical to `info exists`
1645 +*array get* 'arrayName ?pattern?'+::
1646 Returns a list containing pairs of elements. The first
1647 element in each pair is the name of an element in arrayName
1648 and the second element of each pair is the value of the
1649 array element. The order of the pairs is undefined. If
1650 pattern is not specified, then all of the elements of the
1651 array are included in the result. If pattern is specified,
1652 then only those elements whose names match pattern (using
1653 the matching rules of string match) are included. If arrayName
1654 isn't the name of an array variable, or if the array contains
1655 no elements, then an empty list is returned.
1657 +*array names* 'arrayName ?pattern?'+::
1658 Returns a list containing the names of all of the elements
1659 in the array that match pattern. If pattern is omitted then
1660 the command returns all of the element names in the array.
1661 If pattern is specified, then only those elements whose
1662 names match pattern (using the matching rules of string
1663 match) are included. If there are no (matching) elements
1664 in the array, or if arrayName isn't the name of an array
1665 variable, then an empty string is returned.
1667 +*array set* 'arrayName list'+::
1668 Sets the values of one or more elements in arrayName. list
1669 must have a form like that returned by array get, consisting
1670 of an even number of elements. Each odd-numbered element
1671 in list is treated as an element name within arrayName, and
1672 the following element in list is used as a new value for
1673 that array element. If the variable arrayName does not
1674 already exist and list is empty, arrayName is created with
1675 an empty array value.
1677 +*array size* 'arrayName'+::
1678 Returns the number of elements in the array. If arrayName
1679 isn't the name of an array then 0 is returned.
1681 +*array unset* 'arrayName ?pattern?'+::
1682 Unsets all of the elements in the array that match pattern
1683 (using the matching rules of string match). If arrayName
1684 isn't the name of an array variable or there are no matching
1685 elements in the array, no error will be raised. If pattern
1686 is omitted and arrayName is an array variable, then the
1687 command unsets the entire array. The command always returns
1694 This command may be invoked only inside the body of a loop command
1695 such as `for` or `foreach` or `while`. It returns a +JIM_BREAK+ code
1696 to signal the innermost containing loop command to return immediately.
1700 +*case* 'string' ?in? 'patList body ?patList body ...?'+
1702 +*case* 'string' ?in? {'patList body ?patList body ...?'}+
1704 *Note* that the `switch` command should generally be preferred unless compatibility
1705 with Tcl 6.x is desired.
1707 Match +'string'+ against each of the +'patList'+ arguments
1708 in order. If one matches, then evaluate the following +'body'+ argument
1709 by passing it recursively to the Tcl interpreter, and return the result
1710 of that evaluation. Each +'patList'+ argument consists of a single
1711 pattern or list of patterns. Each pattern may contain any of the wild-cards
1712 described under `string match`.
1714 If a +'patList'+ argument is +default+, the corresponding body will be
1715 evaluated if no +'patList'+ matches +'string'+. If no +'patList'+ argument
1716 matches +'string'+ and no default is given, then the `case` command returns
1719 Two syntaxes are provided.
1721 The first uses a separate argument for each of the patterns and commands;
1722 this form is convenient if substitutions are desired on some of the
1723 patterns or commands.
1725 The second form places all of the patterns and commands together into
1726 a single argument; the argument must have proper list structure, with
1727 the elements of the list being the patterns and commands.
1729 The second form makes it easy to construct multi-line case commands,
1730 since the braces around the whole list make it unnecessary to include a
1731 backslash at the end of each line.
1733 Since the +'patList'+ arguments are in braces in the second form,
1734 no command or variable substitutions are performed on them; this makes
1735 the behaviour of the second form different than the first form in some
1738 Below are some examples of `case` commands:
1740 case abc in {a b} {format 1} default {format 2} a* {format 3}
1750 will return '1', and
1765 +*catch* ?-?no?'code \...'? ?--? 'command ?resultVarName? ?optionsVarName?'+
1767 The `catch` command may be used to prevent errors from aborting
1768 command interpretation. `catch` evaluates +'command'+, and returns a
1769 +JIM_OK+ code, regardless of any errors that might occur while
1770 executing +'command'+ (with the possible exception of +JIM_SIGNAL+ -
1773 The return value from `catch` is a decimal string giving the code
1774 returned by the Tcl interpreter after executing +'command'+. This
1775 will be '0' (+JIM_OK+) if there were no errors in +'command'+; otherwise
1776 it will have a non-zero value corresponding to one of the exceptional
1777 return codes (see jim.h for the definitions of code values, or the
1778 `info returncodes` command).
1780 If the +'resultVarName'+ argument is given, then it gives the name
1781 of a variable; `catch` will set the value of the variable to the
1782 string returned from +'command'+ (either a result or an error message).
1784 If the +'optionsVarName'+ argument is given, then it gives the name
1785 of a variable; `catch` will set the value of the variable to a
1786 dictionary. For any return code other than +JIM_RETURN+, the value
1787 for the key +-code+ will be set to the return code. For +JIM_RETURN+
1788 it will be set to the code given in `return -code`. Additionally,
1789 for the return code +JIM_ERR+, the value of the key +-errorinfo+
1790 will contain the current stack trace (the same result as `info stacktrace`),
1791 the value of the key +-errorcode+ will contain the
1792 same value as the global variable $::errorCode, and the value of
1793 the key +-level+ will be the current return level (see `return -level`).
1794 This can be useful to rethrow an error:
1796 if {[catch {...} msg opts]} {
1797 ...maybe do something with the error...
1799 return {*}$opts $msg
1802 Normally `catch` will +'not'+ catch any of the codes +JIM_EXIT+, +JIM_EVAL+ or +JIM_SIGNAL+.
1803 The set of codes which will be caught may be modified by specifying the one more codes before
1806 e.g. To catch +JIM_EXIT+ but not +JIM_BREAK+ or +JIM_CONTINUE+
1808 catch -exit -nobreak -nocontinue -- { ... }
1810 The use of +--+ is optional. It signifies that no more return code options follow.
1812 Note that if a signal marked as `signal handle` is caught with `catch -signal`, the return value
1813 (stored in +'resultVarName'+) is name of the signal caught.
1819 Change the current working directory to +'dirName'+.
1821 Returns an empty string.
1823 This command can potentially be disruptive to an application, so it may
1824 be removed in some applications.
1829 Returns the current time as seconds since the epoch.
1832 Returns the current time in `clicks'.
1834 +*clock microseconds*+::
1835 Returns the current time in microseconds.
1837 +*clock milliseconds*+::
1838 Returns the current time in milliseconds.
1840 +*clock format* 'seconds' ?*-format* 'format?'+::
1841 Format the given time (seconds since the epoch) according to the given
1842 format. See strftime(3) for supported formats.
1843 If no format is supplied, "%c" is used.
1845 +*clock scan* 'str' *-format* 'format'+::
1846 Scan the given time string using the given format string.
1847 See strptime(3) for supported formats.
1855 Closes the file given by +'fileId'+.
1856 +'fileId'+ must be the return value from a previous invocation
1857 of the `open` command; after this command, it should not be
1864 Normally reference garbage collection is automatically performed periodically.
1865 However it may be run immediately with the `collect` command.
1867 See GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
1871 +*concat* 'arg ?arg \...?'+
1873 This command treats each argument as a list and concatenates them
1874 into a single list. It permits any number of arguments. For example,
1877 concat a b {c d e} {f {g h}}
1889 This command may be invoked only inside the body of a loop command such
1890 as `for` or `foreach` or `while`. It returns a +JIM_CONTINUE+ code to
1891 signal the innermost containing loop command to skip the remainder of
1892 the loop's body but continue with the next iteration of the loop.
1896 +*alias* 'args\...'+
1898 Similar to `alias` except it creates an anonymous procedure (lambda) instead of
1901 the following creates a local, unnamed alias for the command `info exists`.
1903 set e [local curry info exists]
1908 `curry` returns the name of the procedure.
1910 See also `proc`, `alias`, `lambda`, `local`.
1914 +*dict* 'option ?arg\...?'+
1916 Performs one of several operations on dictionary values.
1918 The +'option'+ argument determines what action is carried out by the
1919 command. The legal +'options'+ are:
1921 +*dict create* '?key value \...?'+::
1922 Create and return a new dictionary value that contains each of
1923 the key/value mappings listed as arguments (keys and values
1924 alternating, with each key being followed by its associated
1927 +*dict exists* 'dictionary key ?key \...?'+::
1928 Returns a boolean value indicating whether the given key (or path
1929 of keys through a set of nested dictionaries) exists in the given
1930 dictionary value. This returns a true value exactly when `dict get`
1931 on that path will succeed.
1933 +*dict get* 'dictionary ?key \...?'+::
1934 Given a dictionary value (first argument) and a key (second argument),
1935 this will retrieve the value for that key. Where several keys are
1936 supplied, the behaviour of the command shall be as if the result
1937 of "`dict get $dictVal $key`" was passed as the first argument to
1938 dict get with the remaining arguments as second (and possibly
1939 subsequent) arguments. This facilitates lookups in nested dictionaries.
1940 If no keys are provided, dict would return a list containing pairs
1941 of elements in a manner similar to array get. That is, the first
1942 element of each pair would be the key and the second element would
1943 be the value for that key. It is an error to attempt to retrieve
1944 a value for a key that is not present in the dictionary.
1946 +*dict keys* 'dictionary ?pattern?'+::
1947 Returns a list of the keys in the dictionary.
1948 If pattern is specified, then only those keys whose
1949 names match +'pattern'+ (using the matching rules of string
1950 match) are included.
1952 +*dict merge* ?'dictionary \...'?+::
1953 Return a dictionary that contains the contents of each of the
1954 +'dictionary'+ arguments. Where two (or more) dictionaries
1955 contain a mapping for the same key, the resulting dictionary
1956 maps that key to the value according to the last dictionary on
1957 the command line containing a mapping for that key.
1959 +*dict set* 'dictionaryName key ?key \...? value'+::
1960 This operation takes the +'name'+ of a variable containing a dictionary
1961 value and places an updated dictionary value in that variable
1962 containing a mapping from the given key to the given value. When
1963 multiple keys are present, this operation creates or updates a chain
1964 of nested dictionaries.
1966 +*dict size* 'dictionary'+::
1967 Return the number of key/value mappings in the given dictionary value.
1969 +*dict unset* 'dictionaryName key ?key \...? value'+::
1970 This operation (the companion to `dict set`) takes the name of a
1971 variable containing a dictionary value and places an updated
1972 dictionary value in that variable that does not contain a mapping
1973 for the given key. Where multiple keys are present, this describes
1974 a path through nested dictionaries to the mapping to remove. At
1975 least one key must be specified, but the last key on the key-path
1976 need not exist. All other components on the path must exist.
1978 +*dict with* 'dictionaryName key ?key \...? script'+::
1979 Execute the Tcl script in +'script'+ with the value for each
1980 key in +'dictionaryName'+ mapped to a variable with the same
1981 name. Where one or more keys are given, these indicate a chain
1982 of nested dictionaries, with the innermost dictionary being the
1983 one opened out for the execution of body. Making +'dictionaryName'+
1984 unreadable will make the updates to the dictionary be discarded,
1985 and this also happens if the contents of +'dictionaryName'+ are
1986 adjusted so that the chain of dictionaries no longer exists.
1987 The result of `dict with` is (unless some kind of error occurs)
1988 the result of the evaluation of body.
1990 The variables are mapped in the scope enclosing the `dict with`;
1991 it is recommended that this command only be used in a local
1992 scope (procedure). Because of this, the variables set by
1993 `dict with` will continue to exist after the command finishes (unless
1994 explicitly unset). Note that changes to the contents of +'dictionaryName'+
1995 only happen when +'script'+ terminates.
1997 +*dict for, values, incr, append, lappend, update, info, replace*+ to be documented...
2001 +*env* '?name? ?default?'+
2003 If +'name'+ is supplied, returns the value of +'name'+ from the initial
2004 environment (see getenv(3)). An error is returned if +'name'+ does not
2005 exist in the environment, unless +'default'+ is supplied - in which case
2006 that value is returned instead.
2008 If no arguments are supplied, returns a list of all environment variables
2009 and their values as +{name value \...}+
2011 See also the global variable +::env+
2019 Returns 1 if an end-of-file condition has occurred on +'fileId'+,
2022 +'fileId'+ must have been the return value from a previous call to `open`,
2023 or it may be +stdin+, +stdout+, or +stderr+ to refer to one of the
2024 standard I/O channels.
2028 +*error* 'message ?stacktrace?'+
2030 Returns a +JIM_ERR+ code, which causes command interpretation to be
2031 unwound. +'message'+ is a string that is returned to the application
2032 to indicate what went wrong.
2034 If the +'stacktrace'+ argument is provided and is non-empty,
2035 it is used to initialize the stacktrace.
2037 This feature is most useful in conjunction with the `catch` command:
2038 if a caught error cannot be handled successfully, +'stacktrace'+ can be used
2039 to return a stack trace reflecting the original point of occurrence
2044 error $errMsg [info stacktrace]
2046 See also `errorInfo`, `info stacktrace`, `catch` and `return`
2050 +*errorInfo* 'error ?stacktrace?'+
2052 Returns a human-readable representation of the given error message and stack trace.
2055 if {[catch {...} error]} {
2056 puts stderr [errorInfo $error [info stacktrace]]
2064 +*eval* 'arg ?arg\...?'+
2066 `eval` takes one or more arguments, which together comprise a Tcl
2067 command (or collection of Tcl commands separated by newlines in the
2068 usual way). `eval` concatenates all its arguments in the same
2069 fashion as the `concat` command, passes the concatenated string to the
2070 Tcl interpreter recursively, and returns the result of that
2071 evaluation (or any error generated by it).
2075 +*exec* 'arg ?arg\...?'+
2077 This command treats its arguments as the specification
2078 of one or more UNIX commands to execute as subprocesses.
2079 The commands take the form of a standard shell pipeline;
2080 +|+ arguments separate commands in the
2081 pipeline and cause standard output of the preceding command
2082 to be piped into standard input of the next command (or +|&+ for
2083 both standard output and standard error).
2085 Under normal conditions the result of the `exec` command
2086 consists of the standard output produced by the last command
2087 in the pipeline followed by the standard error output.
2089 If any of the commands writes to its standard error file,
2090 then this will be included in the result after the standard output
2091 of the last command.
2093 Note that unlike Tcl, data written to standard error does not cause
2094 `exec` to return an error.
2096 If any of the commands in the pipeline exit abnormally or
2097 are killed or suspended, then `exec` will return an error.
2098 If no standard error output was produced, or is redirected,
2099 the error message will include the normal result, as above,
2100 followed by error messages describing the abnormal terminations.
2102 If any standard error output was produced, these abnormal termination
2103 messages are suppressed.
2105 If the last character of the result or error message
2106 is a newline then that character is deleted from the result
2107 or error message for consistency with normal
2110 An +'arg'+ may have one of the following special forms:
2113 The standard output of the last command in the pipeline
2114 is redirected to the file. In this situation `exec`
2115 will normally return an empty string.
2118 As above, but append to the file.
2121 The standard output of the last command in the pipeline is
2122 redirected to the given (writable) file descriptor (e.g. stdout,
2123 stderr, or the result of `open`). In this situation `exec`
2124 will normally return an empty string.
2127 The standard error of the last command in the pipeline
2128 is redirected to the file.
2131 As above, but append to the file.
2134 The standard error of the last command in the pipeline is
2135 redirected to the given (writable) file descriptor.
2138 The standard error of the last command in the pipeline is
2139 redirected to the same file descriptor as the standard output.
2142 Both the standard output and standard error of the last command
2143 in the pipeline is redirected to the file.
2146 As above, but append to the file.
2149 The standard input of the first command in the pipeline
2150 is taken from the file.
2153 The standard input of the first command is taken as the
2154 given immediate value.
2157 The standard input of the first command in the pipeline
2158 is taken from the given (readable) file descriptor.
2160 If there is no redirection of standard input, standard error
2161 or standard output, these are connected to the corresponding
2162 input or output of the application.
2164 If the last +'arg'+ is +&+ then the command will be
2165 executed in background.
2166 In this case the standard output from the last command
2167 in the pipeline will
2168 go to the application's standard output unless
2169 redirected in the command, and error output from all
2170 the commands in the pipeline will go to the application's
2171 standard error file. The return value of exec in this case
2172 is a list of process ids (pids) in the pipeline.
2174 Each +'arg'+ becomes one word for a command, except for
2175 +|+, +<+, +<<+, +>+, and +&+ arguments, and the
2176 arguments that follow +<+, +<<+, and +>+.
2178 The first word in each command is taken as the command name;
2179 the directories in the PATH environment variable are searched for
2180 an executable by the given name.
2182 No `glob` expansion or other shell-like substitutions
2183 are performed on the arguments to commands.
2185 If the command fails, the global $::errorCode (and the -errorcode
2186 option in `catch`) will be set to a list, as follows:
2188 +*CHILDKILLED* 'pid sigName msg'+::
2189 This format is used when a child process has been killed
2190 because of a signal. The pid element will be the process's
2191 identifier (in decimal). The sigName element will be the
2192 symbolic name of the signal that caused the process to
2193 terminate; it will be one of the names from the include
2194 file signal.h, such as SIGPIPE. The msg element will be a
2195 short human-readable message describing the signal, such
2196 as "write on pipe with no readers" for SIGPIPE.
2198 +*CHILDSUSP* 'pid sigName msg'+::
2199 This format is used when a child process has been suspended
2200 because of a signal. The pid element will be the process's
2201 identifier, in decimal. The sigName element will be the
2202 symbolic name of the signal that caused the process to
2203 suspend; this will be one of the names from the include
2204 file signal.h, such as SIGTTIN. The msg element will be a
2205 short human-readable message describing the signal, such
2206 as "background tty read" for SIGTTIN.
2208 +*CHILDSTATUS* 'pid code'+::
2209 This format is used when a child process has exited with a
2210 non-zero exit status. The pid element will be the process's
2211 identifier (in decimal) and the code element will be the
2212 exit code returned by the process (also in decimal).
2214 The environment for the executed command is set from $::env (unless
2215 this variable is unset, in which case the original environment is used).
2219 +*exists ?-var|-proc|-command|-alias?* 'name'+
2221 Checks the existence of the given variable, procedure, command
2222 or alias respectively and returns 1 if it exists or 0 if not. This command
2223 provides a more simplified/convenient version of `info exists`,
2224 `info procs` and `info commands`.
2226 If the type is omitted, a type of '-var' is used. The type may be abbreviated.
2230 +*exit* '?returnCode?'+
2232 Terminate the process, returning +'returnCode'+ to the
2233 parent as the exit status.
2235 If +'returnCode'+ isn't specified then it defaults
2238 Note that exit can be caught with `catch`.
2244 Calls the expression processor to evaluate +'arg'+, and returns
2245 the result as a string. See the section EXPRESSIONS above.
2247 Note that Jim supports a shorthand syntax for `expr` as +$(\...)+
2248 The following two are identical.
2250 set x [expr {3 * 2 + 1}]
2255 +*file* 'option name ?arg\...?'+
2257 Operate on a file or a file name. +'name'+ is the name of a file.
2259 +'option'+ indicates what to do with the file name. Any unique
2260 abbreviation for +'option'+ is acceptable. The valid options are:
2262 +*file atime* 'name'+::
2263 Return a decimal string giving the time at which file +'name'+
2264 was last accessed. The time is measured in the standard UNIX
2265 fashion as seconds from a fixed starting time (often January 1, 1970).
2266 If the file doesn't exist or its access time cannot be queried then an
2269 +*file copy ?-force?* 'source target'+::
2270 Copies file +'source'+ to file +'target'+. The source file must exist.
2271 The target file must not exist, unless +-force+ is specified.
2273 +*file delete ?-force? ?--?* 'name\...'+::
2274 Deletes file or directory +'name'+. If the file or directory doesn't exist, nothing happens.
2275 If it can't be deleted, an error is generated. Non-empty directories will not be deleted
2276 unless the +-force+ options is given. In this case no errors will be generated, even
2277 if the file/directory can't be deleted. Use +'--'+ if there is any possibility of
2278 the first name being +'-force'+.
2280 +*file dirname* 'name'+::
2281 Return all of the characters in +'name'+ up to but not including
2282 the last slash character. If there are no slashes in +'name'+
2283 then return +.+ (a single dot). If the last slash in +'name'+ is its first
2284 character, then return +/+.
2286 +*file executable* 'name'+::
2287 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is executable by
2288 the current user, '0' otherwise.
2290 +*file exists* 'name'+::
2291 Return '1' if file +'name'+ exists and the current user has
2292 search privileges for the directories leading to it, '0' otherwise.
2294 +*file extension* 'name'+::
2295 Return all of the characters in +'name'+ after and including the
2296 last dot in +'name'+. If there is no dot in +'name'+ then return
2299 +*file isdirectory* 'name'+::
2300 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is a directory,
2303 +*file isfile* 'name'+::
2304 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is a regular file,
2307 +*file join* 'arg\...'+::
2308 Joins multiple path components. Note that if any components is
2309 an absolute path, the preceding components are ignored.
2310 Thus +"`file` join /tmp /root"+ returns +"/root"+.
2312 +*file link* ?*-hard|-symbolic*? 'newname target'+::
2313 Creates a hard link (default) or symbolic link from +'newname'+ to +'target'+.
2314 Note that the sense of this command is the opposite of `file rename` and `file copy`
2315 and also of `ln`, but this is compatible with Tcl.
2316 An error is returned if +'target'+ doesn't exist or +'newname'+ already exists.
2318 +*file lstat* 'name varName'+::
2319 Same as 'stat' option (see below) except uses the +'lstat'+
2320 kernel call instead of +'stat'+. This means that if +'name'+
2321 refers to a symbolic link the information returned in +'varName'+
2322 is for the link rather than the file it refers to. On systems that
2323 don't support symbolic links this option behaves exactly the same
2324 as the 'stat' option.
2326 +*file mkdir* 'dir1 ?dir2\...?'+::
2327 Creates each directory specified. For each pathname +'dir'+ specified,
2328 this command will create all non-existing parent directories
2329 as well as +'dir'+ itself. If an existing directory is specified,
2330 then no action is taken and no error is returned. Trying to
2331 overwrite an existing file with a directory will result in an
2332 error. Arguments are processed in the order specified, halting
2333 at the first error, if any.
2335 +*file mtime* 'name ?time?'+::
2336 Return a decimal string giving the time at which file +'name'+
2337 was last modified. The time is measured in the standard UNIX
2338 fashion as seconds from a fixed starting time (often January 1, 1970).
2339 If the file doesn't exist or its modified time cannot be queried then an
2340 error is generated. If +'time'+ is given, sets the modification time
2341 of the file to the given value.
2343 +*file normalize* 'name'+::
2344 Return the normalized path of +'name'+. See 'realpath(3)'.
2346 +*file owned* 'name'+::
2347 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is owned by the current user,
2350 +*file readable* 'name'+::
2351 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is readable by
2352 the current user, '0' otherwise.
2354 +*file readlink* 'name'+::
2355 Returns the value of the symbolic link given by +'name'+ (i.e. the
2356 name of the file it points to). If
2357 +'name'+ isn't a symbolic link or its value cannot be read, then
2358 an error is returned. On systems that don't support symbolic links
2359 this option is undefined.
2361 +*file rename* ?*-force*? 'oldname' 'newname'+::
2362 Renames the file from the old name to the new name.
2363 If +'newname'+ already exists, an error is returned unless +'-force'+ is
2366 +*file rootname* 'name'+::
2367 Return all of the characters in +'name'+ up to but not including
2368 the last '.' character in the name. If +'name'+ doesn't contain
2369 a dot, then return +'name'+.
2371 +*file size* 'name'+::
2372 Return a decimal string giving the size of file +'name'+ in bytes.
2373 If the file doesn't exist or its size cannot be queried then an
2376 +*file stat* 'name ?varName?'+::
2377 Invoke the 'stat' kernel call on +'name'+, and return the result
2378 as a dictionary with the following keys: 'atime',
2379 'ctime', 'dev', 'gid', 'ino', 'mode', 'mtime',
2380 'nlink', 'size', 'type', 'uid'.
2381 Each element except 'type' is a decimal string with the value of
2382 the corresponding field from the 'stat' return structure; see the
2383 manual entry for 'stat' for details on the meanings of the values.
2384 The 'type' element gives the type of the file in the same form
2385 returned by the command `file type`.
2386 If +'varName'+ is specified, it is taken to be the name of an array
2387 variable and the values are also stored into the array.
2389 +*file tail* 'name'+::
2390 Return all of the characters in +'name'+ after the last slash.
2391 If +'name'+ contains no slashes then return +'name'+.
2393 +*file tempfile* '?template?'+::
2394 Creates and returns the name of a unique temporary file. If +'template'+ is omitted, a
2395 default template will be used to place the file in /tmp. See 'mkstemp(3)' for
2396 the format of the template and security concerns.
2398 +*file type* 'name'+::
2399 Returns a string giving the type of file +'name'+, which will be
2400 one of +file+, +directory+, +characterSpecial+,
2401 +blockSpecial+, +fifo+, +link+, or +socket+.
2403 +*file writable* 'name'+::
2404 Return '1' if file +'name'+ is writable by
2405 the current user, '0' otherwise.
2407 The `file` commands that return 0/1 results are often used in
2408 conditional or looping commands, for example:
2410 if {![file exists foo]} {
2411 error {bad file name}
2418 +*finalize* 'reference ?command?'+
2420 If +'command'+ is omitted, returns the finalizer command for the given reference.
2422 Otherwise, sets a new finalizer command for the given reference. +'command'+ may be
2423 the empty string to remove the current finalizer.
2425 The reference must be a valid reference create with the `ref`
2428 See GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
2436 Flushes any output that has been buffered for +'fileId'+. +'fileId'+ must
2437 have been the return value from a previous call to `open`, or it may be
2438 +stdout+ or +stderr+ to access one of the standard I/O streams; it must
2439 refer to a file that was opened for writing. This command returns an
2444 +*for* 'start test next body'+
2446 `for` is a looping command, similar in structure to the C `for` statement.
2447 The +'start'+, +'next'+, and +'body'+ arguments must be Tcl command strings,
2448 and +'test'+ is an expression string.
2450 The `for` command first invokes the Tcl interpreter to execute +'start'+.
2451 Then it repeatedly evaluates +'test'+ as an expression; if the result is
2452 non-zero it invokes the Tcl interpreter on +'body'+, then invokes the Tcl
2453 interpreter on +'next'+, then repeats the loop. The command terminates
2454 when +'test'+ evaluates to 0.
2456 If a `continue` command is invoked within +'body'+ then any remaining
2457 commands in the current execution of +'body'+ are skipped; processing
2458 continues by invoking the Tcl interpreter on +'next'+, then evaluating
2459 +'test'+, and so on.
2461 If a `break` command is invoked within +'body'+ or +'next'+, then the `for`
2462 command will return immediately.
2464 The operation of `break` and `continue` are similar to the corresponding
2467 `for` returns an empty string.
2471 +*foreach* 'varName list body'+
2473 +*foreach* 'varList list ?varList2 list2 \...? body'+
2475 In this command, +'varName'+ is the name of a variable, +'list'+
2476 is a list of values to assign to +'varName'+, and +'body'+ is a
2477 collection of Tcl commands.
2479 For each field in +'list'+ (in order from left to right), `foreach` assigns
2480 the contents of the field to +'varName'+ (as if the `lindex` command
2481 had been used to extract the field), then calls the Tcl interpreter to
2484 If instead of being a simple name, +'varList'+ is used, multiple assignments
2485 are made each time through the loop, one for each element of +'varList'+.
2487 For example, if there are two elements in +'varList'+ and six elements in
2488 the list, the loop will be executed three times.
2490 If the length of the list doesn't evenly divide by the number of elements
2491 in +'varList'+, the value of the remaining variables in the last iteration
2492 of the loop are undefined.
2494 The `break` and `continue` statements may be invoked inside +'body'+,
2495 with the same effect as in the `for` command.
2497 `foreach` returns an empty string.
2501 +*format* 'formatString ?arg \...?'+
2503 This command generates a formatted string in the same way as the
2504 C 'sprintf' procedure (it uses 'sprintf' in its
2505 implementation). +'formatString'+ indicates how to format
2506 the result, using +%+ fields as in 'sprintf', and the additional
2507 arguments, if any, provide values to be substituted into the result.
2509 All of the 'sprintf' options are valid; see the 'sprintf'
2510 man page for details. Each +'arg'+ must match the expected type
2511 from the +%+ field in +'formatString'+; the `format` command
2512 converts each argument to the correct type (floating, integer, etc.)
2513 before passing it to 'sprintf' for formatting.
2515 The only unusual conversion is for +%c+; in this case the argument
2516 must be a decimal string, which will then be converted to the corresponding
2517 ASCII (or UTF-8) character value.
2519 In addition, Jim Tcl provides basic support for conversion to binary with +%b+.
2521 `format` does backslash substitution on its +'formatString'+
2522 argument, so backslash sequences in +'formatString'+ will be handled
2523 correctly even if the argument is in braces.
2525 The return value from `format` is the formatted string.
2529 +*getref* 'reference'+
2531 Returns the string associated with +'reference'+. The reference must
2532 be a valid reference create with the `ref` command.
2534 See GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
2538 +*gets* 'fileId ?varName?'+
2540 +'fileId' *gets* '?varName?'+
2542 Reads the next line from the file given by +'fileId'+ and discards
2543 the terminating newline character.
2545 If +'varName'+ is specified, then the line is placed in the variable
2546 by that name and the return value is a count of the number of characters
2547 read (not including the newline).
2549 If the end of the file is reached before reading
2550 any characters then -1 is returned and +'varName'+ is set to an
2553 If +'varName'+ is not specified then the return value will be
2554 the line (minus the newline character) or an empty string if
2555 the end of the file is reached before reading any characters.
2557 An empty string will also be returned if a line contains no characters
2558 except the newline, so `eof` may have to be used to determine
2559 what really happened.
2561 If the last character in the file is not a newline character, then
2562 `gets` behaves as if there were an additional newline character
2563 at the end of the file.
2565 +'fileId'+ must be +stdin+ or the return value from a previous
2566 call to `open`; it must refer to a file that was opened
2571 +*glob* ?*-nocomplain*? ?*-directory* 'dir'? ?*-tails*? ?*--*? 'pattern ?pattern \...?'+
2573 This command performs filename globbing, using csh rules. The returned
2574 value from `glob` is the list of expanded filenames.
2576 If +-nocomplain+ is specified as the first argument then an empty
2577 list may be returned; otherwise an error is returned if the expanded
2578 list is empty. The +-nocomplain+ argument must be provided
2579 exactly: an abbreviation will not be accepted.
2581 If +-directory+ is given, the +'dir'+ is understood to contain a
2582 directory name to search in. This allows globbing inside directories
2583 whose names may contain glob-sensitive characters. The returned names
2584 include the directory name unless +'-tails'+ is specified.
2586 If +'-tails'+ is specified, along with +-directory+, the returned names
2587 are relative to the given directory.
2592 +*global* 'varName ?varName \...?'+
2594 This command is ignored unless a Tcl procedure is being interpreted.
2595 If so, then it declares each given +'varName'+ to be a global variable
2596 rather than a local one. For the duration of the current procedure
2597 (and only while executing in the current procedure), any reference to
2598 +'varName'+ will be bound to a global variable instead
2601 An alternative to using `global` is to use the +::+ prefix
2602 to explicitly name a variable in the global scope.
2606 +*if* 'expr1' ?*then*? 'body1' *elseif* 'expr2' ?*then*? 'body2' *elseif* \... ?*else*? ?'bodyN'?+
2608 The `if` command evaluates +'expr1'+ as an expression (in the same way
2609 that `expr` evaluates its argument). The value of the expression must
2610 be numeric; if it is non-zero then +'body1'+ is executed by passing it to
2611 the Tcl interpreter.
2613 Otherwise +'expr2'+ is evaluated as an expression and if it is non-zero
2614 then +'body2'+ is executed, and so on.
2616 If none of the expressions evaluates to non-zero then +'bodyN'+ is executed.
2618 The +then+ and +else+ arguments are optional "noise words" to make the
2619 command easier to read.
2621 There may be any number of +elseif+ clauses, including zero. +'bodyN'+
2622 may also be omitted as long as +else+ is omitted too.
2624 The return value from the command is the result of the body script that
2625 was executed, or an empty string if none of the expressions was non-zero
2626 and there was no +'bodyN'+.
2630 +*incr* 'varName ?increment?'+
2632 Increment the value stored in the variable whose name is +'varName'+.
2633 The value of the variable must be integral.
2635 If +'increment'+ is supplied then its value (which must be an
2636 integer) is added to the value of variable +'varName'+; otherwise
2637 1 is added to +'varName'+.
2639 The new value is stored as a decimal string in variable +'varName'+
2640 and also returned as result.
2642 If the variable does not exist, the variable is implicitly created
2643 and set to +0+ first.
2648 +*info* 'option ?arg\...?'+::
2650 Provide information about various internals to the Tcl interpreter.
2651 The legal +'option'+'s (which may be abbreviated) are:
2653 +*info args* 'procname'+::
2654 Returns a list containing the names of the arguments to procedure
2655 +'procname'+, in order. +'procname'+ must be the name of a
2656 Tcl command procedure.
2658 +*info alias* 'command'+::
2659 +'command'+ must be an alias created with `alias`. In which case the target
2660 command and arguments, as passed to `alias` are returned. See `exists -alias`
2662 +*info body* 'procname'+::
2663 Returns the body of procedure +'procname'+. +'procname'+ must be
2664 the name of a Tcl command procedure.
2667 Returns a list of all open file handles from `open` or `socket`
2669 +*info commands* ?'pattern'?+::
2670 If +'pattern'+ isn't specified, returns a list of names of all the
2671 Tcl commands, including both the built-in commands written in C and
2672 the command procedures defined using the `proc` command.
2673 If +'pattern'+ is specified, only those names matching +'pattern'+
2674 are returned. Matching is determined using the same rules as for
2677 +*info complete* 'command' ?'missing'?+::
2678 Returns 1 if +'command'+ is a complete Tcl command in the sense of
2679 having no unclosed quotes, braces, brackets or array element names,
2680 If the command doesn't appear to be complete then 0 is returned.
2681 This command is typically used in line-oriented input environments
2682 to allow users to type in commands that span multiple lines; if the
2683 command isn't complete, the script can delay evaluating it until additional
2684 lines have been typed to complete the command. If +'varName'+ is specified, the
2685 missing character is stored in the variable with that name.
2687 +*info exists* 'varName'+::
2688 Returns '1' if the variable named +'varName'+ exists in the
2689 current context (either as a global or local variable), returns '0'
2692 +*info frame* ?'number'?+::
2693 If +'number'+ is not specified, this command returns a number
2694 which is the same result as `info level` - the current stack frame level.
2695 If +'number'+ is specified, then the result is a list consisting of the procedure,
2696 filename and line number for the procedure call at level +'number'+ on the stack.
2697 If +'number'+ is positive then it selects a particular stack level (1 refers
2698 to the top-most active procedure, 2 to the procedure it called, and
2699 so on); otherwise it gives a level relative to the current level
2700 (0 refers to the current procedure, -1 to its caller, and so on).
2701 The level has an identical meaning to `info level`.
2703 +*info globals* ?'pattern'?+::
2704 If +'pattern'+ isn't specified, returns a list of all the names
2705 of currently-defined global variables.
2706 If +'pattern'+ is specified, only those names matching +'pattern'+
2707 are returned. Matching is determined using the same rules as for
2711 An alias for `os.gethostname` for compatibility with Tcl 6.x
2713 +*info level* ?'number'?+::
2714 If +'number'+ is not specified, this command returns a number
2715 giving the stack level of the invoking procedure, or 0 if the
2716 command is invoked at top-level. If +'number'+ is specified,
2717 then the result is a list consisting of the name and arguments for the
2718 procedure call at level +'number'+ on the stack. If +'number'+
2719 is positive then it selects a particular stack level (1 refers
2720 to the top-most active procedure, 2 to the procedure it called, and
2721 so on); otherwise it gives a level relative to the current level
2722 (0 refers to the current procedure, -1 to its caller, and so on).
2723 See the `uplevel` command for more information on what stack
2726 +*info locals* ?'pattern'?+::
2727 If +'pattern'+ isn't specified, returns a list of all the names
2728 of currently-defined local variables, including arguments to the
2729 current procedure, if any. Variables defined with the `global`
2730 and `upvar` commands will not be returned. If +'pattern'+ is
2731 specified, only those names matching +'pattern'+ are returned.
2732 Matching is determined using the same rules as for `string match`.
2734 +*info nameofexecutable*+::
2735 Returns the name of the binary file from which the application
2736 was invoked. A full path will be returned, unless the path
2737 can't be determined, in which case the empty string will be returned.
2739 +*info procs* ?'pattern'?+::
2740 If +'pattern'+ isn't specified, returns a list of all the
2741 names of Tcl command procedures.
2742 If +'pattern'+ is specified, only those names matching +'pattern'+
2743 are returned. Matching is determined using the same rules as for
2746 +*info references*+::
2747 Returns a list of all references which have not yet been garbage
2750 +*info returncodes* ?'code'?+::
2751 Returns a list representing the mapping of standard return codes
2752 to names. e.g. +{0 ok 1 error 2 return \...}+. If a code is given,
2753 instead returns the name for the given code.
2756 If a Tcl script file is currently being evaluated (i.e. there is a
2757 call to 'Jim_EvalFile' active or there is an active invocation
2758 of the `source` command), then this command returns the name
2759 of the innermost file being processed. Otherwise the command returns an
2762 +*info source* 'script ?filename line?'+::
2763 With a single argument, returns the original source location of the given script as a list of
2764 +{filename linenumber}+. If the source location can't be determined, the
2765 list +{{} 0}+ is returned. If +'filename'+ and +'line'+ are given, returns a copy
2766 of +'script'+ with the associate source information. This can be useful to produce
2767 useful messages from `eval`, etc. if the original source information may be lost.
2769 +*info stacktrace*+::
2770 After an error is caught with `catch`, returns the stack trace as a list
2771 of +{procedure filename line \...}+.
2773 +*info statics* 'procname'+::
2774 Returns a dictionary of the static variables of procedure
2775 +'procname'+. +'procname'+ must be the name of a Tcl command
2776 procedure. An empty dictionary is returned if the procedure has
2777 no static variables.
2780 Returns the version number for this version of Jim in the form +*x.yy*+.
2782 +*info vars* ?'pattern'?+::
2783 If +'pattern'+ isn't specified,
2784 returns a list of all the names of currently-visible variables, including
2785 both locals and currently-visible globals.
2786 If +'pattern'+ is specified, only those names matching +'pattern'+
2787 are returned. Matching is determined using the same rules as for
2792 +*join* 'list ?joinString?'+
2794 The +'list'+ argument must be a valid Tcl list. This command returns the
2795 string formed by joining all of the elements of +'list'+ together with
2796 +'joinString'+ separating each adjacent pair of elements.
2798 The +'joinString'+ argument defaults to a space character.
2802 +*kill* ?'SIG'|*-0*? 'pid'+
2804 Sends the given signal to the process identified by +'pid'+.
2806 The signal may be specified by name or number in one of the following forms:
2814 The signal name may be in either upper or lower case.
2816 The special signal name +-0+ simply checks that a signal +'could'+ be sent.
2818 If no signal is specified, SIGTERM is used.
2820 An error is raised if the signal could not be delivered.
2824 +*lambda* 'args ?statics? body'+
2826 The `lambda` command is identical to `proc`, except rather than
2827 creating a named procedure, it creates an anonymous procedure and returns
2828 the name of the procedure.
2830 See `proc` and GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
2834 +*lappend* 'varName value ?value value \...?'+
2836 Treat the variable given by +'varName'+ as a list and append each of
2837 the +'value'+ arguments to that list as a separate element, with spaces
2840 If +'varName'+ doesn't exist, it is created as a list with elements given
2841 by the +'value'+ arguments. `lappend` is similar to `append` except that
2842 each +'value'+ is appended as a list element rather than raw text.
2844 This command provides a relatively efficient way to build up large lists.
2849 is much more efficient than
2851 set a [concat $a [list $b]]
2857 +*lassign* 'list varName ?varName \...?'+
2859 This command treats the value +'list'+ as a list and assigns successive elements from that list to
2860 the variables given by the +'varName'+ arguments in order. If there are more variable names than
2861 list elements, the remaining variables are set to the empty string. If there are more list elements
2862 than variables, a list of unassigned elements is returned.
2864 jim> lassign {1 2 3} a b; puts a=$a,b=$b
2870 +*local* 'cmd ?arg\...?'+
2872 First, `local` evaluates +'cmd'+ with the given arguments. The return value must
2873 be the name of an existing command, which is marked as having local scope.
2874 This means that when the current procedure exits, the specified
2875 command is deleted. This can be useful with `lambda`, local procedures or
2876 to automatically close a filehandle.
2878 In addition, if a command already exists with the same name,
2879 the existing command will be kept rather than deleted, and may be called
2880 via `upcall`. The previous command will be restored when the current
2881 procedure exits. See `upcall` for more details.
2883 In this example, a local procedure is created. Note that the procedure
2884 continues to have global scope while it is active.
2887 # proc ... returns "inner" which is marked local
2888 local proc inner {} {
2889 # will be deleted when 'outer' exits
2896 In this example, the lambda is deleted at the end of the procedure rather
2897 than waiting until garbage collection.
2900 set x [lambda inner {args} {
2901 # will be deleted when 'outer' exits
2903 # Use 'function' here which simply returns $x
2912 +*loop* 'var first limit ?incr? body'+
2914 Similar to `for` except simpler and possibly more efficient.
2915 With a positive increment, equivalent to:
2917 for {set var $first} {$var < $limit} {incr var $incr} $body
2919 If +'incr'+ is not specified, 1 is used.
2920 Note that setting the loop variable inside the loop does not
2921 affect the loop count.
2925 +*lindex* 'list ?index ...?'+
2927 Treats +'list'+ as a Tcl list and returns element +'index'+ from it
2928 (0 refers to the first element of the list).
2929 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'index'+.
2931 In extracting the element, +'lindex'+ observes the same rules concerning
2932 braces and quotes and backslashes as the Tcl command interpreter; however,
2933 variable substitution and command substitution do not occur.
2935 If no index values are given, simply returns +'list'+
2937 If +'index'+ is negative or greater than or equal to the number of elements
2938 in +'list'+, then an empty string is returned.
2940 If additional index arguments are supplied, then each argument is
2941 used in turn to select an element from the previous indexing
2942 operation, allowing the script to select elements from sublists.
2946 +*linsert* 'list index element ?element element \...?'+
2948 This command produces a new list from +'list'+ by inserting all
2949 of the +'element'+ arguments just before the element +'index'+
2950 of +'list'+. Each +'element'+ argument will become
2951 a separate element of the new list. If +'index'+ is less than
2952 or equal to zero, then the new elements are inserted at the
2953 beginning of the list. If +'index'+ is greater than or equal
2954 to the number of elements in the list, then the new elements are
2955 appended to the list.
2957 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'index'+.
2962 +*list* 'arg ?arg \...?'+
2964 This command returns a list comprised of all the arguments, +'arg'+. Braces
2965 and backslashes get added as necessary, so that the `lindex` command
2966 may be used on the result to re-extract the original arguments, and also
2967 so that `eval` may be used to execute the resulting list, with
2968 +'arg1'+ comprising the command's name and the other args comprising
2969 its arguments. `list` produces slightly different results than
2970 `concat`: `concat` removes one level of grouping before forming
2971 the list, while `list` works directly from the original arguments.
2972 For example, the command
2974 list a b {c d e} {f {g h}}
2978 a b {c d e} {f {g h}}
2980 while `concat` with the same arguments will return
2988 Treats +'list'+ as a list and returns a decimal string giving
2989 the number of elements in it.
2993 +*lset* 'varName ?index ..? newValue'+
2995 Sets an element in a list.
2997 The `lset` command accepts a parameter, +'varName'+, which it interprets
2998 as the name of a variable containing a Tcl list. It also accepts
2999 zero or more indices into the list. Finally, it accepts a new value
3000 for an element of varName. If no indices are presented, the command
3003 lset varName newValue
3005 In this case, newValue replaces the old value of the variable
3008 When presented with a single index, the `lset` command
3009 treats the content of the varName variable as a Tcl list. It addresses
3010 the index'th element in it (0 refers to the first element of the
3011 list). When interpreting the list, `lset` observes the same rules
3012 concerning braces and quotes and backslashes as the Tcl command
3013 interpreter; however, variable substitution and command substitution
3014 do not occur. The command constructs a new list in which the
3015 designated element is replaced with newValue. This new list is
3016 stored in the variable varName, and is also the return value from
3019 If index is negative or greater than or equal to the number of
3020 elements in $varName, then an error occurs.
3022 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'index'+.
3024 If additional index arguments are supplied, then each argument is
3025 used in turn to address an element within a sublist designated by
3026 the previous indexing operation, allowing the script to alter
3027 elements in sublists. The command,
3031 replaces element 2 of sublist 1 with +'newValue'+.
3033 The integer appearing in each index argument must be greater than
3034 or equal to zero. The integer appearing in each index argument must
3035 be strictly less than the length of the corresponding list. In other
3036 words, the `lset` command cannot change the size of a list. If an
3037 index is outside the permitted range, an error is reported.
3042 +*lmap* 'varName list body'+
3044 +*lmap* 'varList list ?varList2 list2 \...? body'+
3046 `lmap` is a "collecting" `foreach` which returns a list of its results.
3050 jim> lmap i {1 2 3 4 5} {expr $i*$i}
3052 jim> lmap a {1 2 3} b {A B C} {list $a $b}
3055 If the body invokes `continue`, no value is added for this iteration.
3056 If the body invokes `break`, the loop ends and no more values are added.
3062 Loads the dynamic extension, +'filename'+. Generally the filename should have
3063 the extension +.so+. The initialisation function for the module must be based
3064 on the name of the file. For example loading +hwaccess.so+ will invoke
3065 the initialisation function, +Jim_hwaccessInit+. Normally the `load` command
3066 should not be used directly. Instead it is invoked automatically by `package require`.
3070 +*lrange* 'list first last'+
3072 +'list'+ must be a valid Tcl list. This command will return a new
3073 list consisting of elements +'first'+ through +'last'+, inclusive.
3075 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'first'+ and +'last'+.
3077 If +'last'+ is greater than or equal to the number of elements
3078 in the list, then it is treated as if it were +end+.
3080 If +'first'+ is greater than +'last'+ then an empty string
3083 Note: +"`lrange` 'list first first'"+ does not always produce the
3084 same result as +"`lindex` 'list first'"+ (although it often does
3085 for simple fields that aren't enclosed in braces); it does, however,
3086 produce exactly the same results as +"`list` [`lindex` 'list first']"+
3091 +*lreplace* 'list first last ?element element \...?'+
3093 Returns a new list formed by replacing one or more elements of
3094 +'list'+ with the +'element'+ arguments.
3096 +'first'+ gives the index in +'list'+ of the first element
3099 If +'first'+ is less than zero then it refers to the first
3100 element of +'list'+; the element indicated by +'first'+
3101 must exist in the list.
3103 +'last'+ gives the index in +'list'+ of the last element
3104 to be replaced; it must be greater than or equal to +'first'+.
3106 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'first'+ and +'last'+.
3108 The +'element'+ arguments specify zero or more new arguments to
3109 be added to the list in place of those that were deleted.
3111 Each +'element'+ argument will become a separate element of
3114 If no +'element'+ arguments are specified, then the elements
3115 between +'first'+ and +'last'+ are simply deleted.
3119 +*lrepeat* 'number element1 ?element2 \...?'+
3121 Build a list by repeating elements +'number'+ times (which must be
3122 a positive integer).
3131 Returns the list in reverse order.
3133 jim> lreverse {1 2 3}
3138 +*lsearch* '?options? list pattern'+
3140 This command searches the elements +'list'+ to see if one of them matches +'pattern'+. If so, the
3141 command returns the index of the first matching element (unless the options +-all+, +-inline+ or +-bool+ are
3142 specified.) If not, the command returns -1. The option arguments indicates how the elements of
3143 the list are to be matched against pattern and must have one of the values below:
3145 *Note* that this command is different from Tcl in that default match type is +-exact+ rather than +-glob+.
3148 +'pattern'+ is a literal string that is compared for exact equality against each list element.
3149 This is the default.
3152 +'pattern'+ is a glob-style pattern which is matched against each list element using the same
3153 rules as the string match command.
3156 +'pattern'+ is treated as a regular expression and matched against each list element using
3157 the rules described by `regexp`.
3159 +*-command* 'cmdname'+::
3160 +'cmdname'+ is a command which is used to match the pattern against each element of the
3161 list. It is invoked as +'cmdname' ?*-nocase*? 'pattern listvalue'+ and should return 1
3162 for a match, or 0 for no match.
3165 Changes the result to be the list of all matching indices (or all matching values if
3166 +-inline+ is specified as well). If indices are returned, the indices will be in numeric
3167 order. If values are returned, the order of the values will be the order of those values
3168 within the input list.
3171 The matching value is returned instead of its index (or an empty string if no value
3172 matches). If +-all+ is also specified, then the result of the command is the list of all
3173 values that matched. The +-inline+ and +-bool+ options are mutually exclusive.
3176 Changes the result to '1' if a match was found, or '0' otherwise. If +-all+ is also specified,
3177 the result will be a list of '0' and '1' for each element of the list depending upon whether
3178 the corresponding element matches. The +-inline+ and +-bool+ options are mutually exclusive.
3181 This negates the sense of the match, returning the index (or value
3182 if +-inline+ is specified) of the first non-matching value in the
3183 list. If +-bool+ is also specified, the '0' will be returned if a
3184 match is found, or '1' otherwise. If +-all+ is also specified,
3185 non-matches will be returned rather than matches.
3188 Causes comparisons to be handled in a case-insensitive manner.
3192 +*lsort* ?*-index* 'listindex'? ?*-nocase|-integer|-real|-command* 'cmdname'? ?*-unique*? ?*-decreasing*|*-increasing*? 'list'+
3194 Sort the elements of +'list'+, returning a new list in sorted order.
3195 By default, ASCII (or UTF-8) sorting is used, with the result in increasing order.
3197 If +-nocase+ is specified, comparisons are case-insensitive.
3199 If +-integer+ is specified, numeric sorting is used.
3201 If +-real+ is specified, floating point number sorting is used.
3203 If +-command 'cmdname'+ is specified, +'cmdname'+ is treated as a command
3204 name. For each comparison, +'cmdname $value1 $value2+' is called which
3205 should compare the values and return an integer less than, equal
3206 to, or greater than zero if the +'$value1'+ is to be considered less
3207 than, equal to, or greater than +'$value2'+, respectively.
3209 If +-decreasing+ is specified, the resulting list is in the opposite
3210 order to what it would be otherwise. +-increasing+ is the default.
3212 If +-unique+ is specified, then only the last set of duplicate elements found in the list will be retained.
3213 Note that duplicates are determined relative to the comparison used in the sort. Thus if +-index 0+ is used,
3214 +{1 a}+ and +{1 b}+ would be considered duplicates and only the second element, +{1 b}+, would be retained.
3216 If +-index 'listindex'+ is specified, each element of the list is treated as a list and
3217 the given index is extracted from the list for comparison. The list index may
3218 be any valid list index, such as +1+, +end+ or +end-2+.
3222 +*open* 'fileName ?access?'+
3224 +*open* '|command-pipeline ?access?'+
3226 Opens a file and returns an identifier
3227 that may be used in future invocations
3228 of commands like `read`, `puts`, and `close`.
3229 +'fileName'+ gives the name of the file to open.
3231 The +'access'+ argument indicates the way in which the file is to be accessed.
3232 It may have any of the following values:
3235 Open the file for reading only; the file must already exist.
3238 Open the file for both reading and writing; the file must
3242 Open the file for writing only. Truncate it if it exists. If it doesn't
3243 exist, create a new file.
3246 Open the file for reading and writing. Truncate it if it exists.
3247 If it doesn't exist, create a new file.
3250 Open the file for writing only. The file must already exist, and the file
3251 is positioned so that new data is appended to the file.
3254 Open the file for reading and writing. If the file doesn't
3255 exist, create a new empty file. Set the initial access position
3256 to the end of the file.
3258 +'access'+ defaults to 'r'.
3260 If a file is opened for both reading and writing, then `seek`
3261 must be invoked between a read and a write, or vice versa.
3263 If the first character of +'fileName'+ is "|" then the remaining
3264 characters of +'fileName'+ are treated as a list of arguments that
3265 describe a command pipeline to invoke, in the same style as the
3266 arguments for exec. In this case, the channel identifier returned
3267 by open may be used to write to the command's input pipe or read
3268 from its output pipe, depending on the value of +'access'+. If write-only
3269 access is used (e.g. +'access'+ is 'w'), then standard output for the
3270 pipeline is directed to the current standard output unless overridden
3271 by the command. If read-only access is used (e.g. +'access'+ is r),
3272 standard input for the pipeline is taken from the current standard
3273 input unless overridden by the command.
3275 The `pid` command may be used to return the process ids of the commands
3276 forming the command pipeline.
3278 See also `socket`, `pid`, `exec`
3282 +*package provide* 'name ?version?'+
3284 Indicates that the current script provides the package named +'name'+.
3285 If no version is specified, '1.0' is used.
3287 Any script which provides a package may include this statement
3288 as the first statement, although it is not required.
3290 +*package require* 'name ?version?'*+
3292 Searches for the package with the given +'name'+ by examining each path
3293 in '$::auto_path' and trying to load '$path/$name.so' as a dynamic extension,
3294 or '$path/$name.tcl' as a script package.
3296 The first such file which is found is considered to provide the package.
3297 (The version number is ignored).
3299 If '$name.so' exists, it is loaded with the `load` command,
3300 otherwise if '$name.tcl' exists it is loaded with the `source` command.
3302 If `load` or `source` fails, `package require` will fail immediately.
3303 No further attempt will be made to locate the file.
3311 The first form returns the process identifier of the current process.
3313 The second form accepts a handle returned by `open` and returns a list
3314 of the process ids forming the pipeline in the same form as `exec ... &`.
3315 If 'fileId' represents a regular file handle rather than a command pipeline,
3316 the empty string is returned instead.
3318 See also `open`, `exec`
3322 +*proc* 'name args ?statics? body'+
3324 The `proc` command creates a new Tcl command procedure, +'name'+.
3325 When the new command is invoked, the contents of +'body'+ will be executed.
3326 Tcl interpreter. +'args'+ specifies the formal arguments to the procedure.
3327 If specified, +'static'+, declares static variables which are bound to the
3330 See PROCEDURES for detailed information about Tcl procedures.
3332 The `proc` command returns +'name'+ (which is useful with `local`).
3334 When a procedure is invoked, the procedure's return value is the
3335 value specified in a `return` command. If the procedure doesn't
3336 execute an explicit `return`, then its return value is the value
3337 of the last command executed in the procedure's body.
3339 If an error occurs while executing the procedure body, then the
3340 procedure-as-a-whole will return that same error.
3344 +*puts* ?*-nonewline*? '?fileId? string'+
3346 +'fileId' *puts* ?*-nonewline*? 'string'+
3348 Writes the characters given by +'string'+ to the file given
3349 by +'fileId'+. +'fileId'+ must have been the return
3350 value from a previous call to `open`, or it may be
3351 +stdout+ or +stderr+ to refer to one of the standard I/O
3352 channels; it must refer to a file that was opened for
3355 In the first form, if no +'fileId'+ is specified then it defaults to +stdout+.
3356 `puts` normally outputs a newline character after +'string'+,
3357 but this feature may be suppressed by specifying the +-nonewline+
3360 Output to files is buffered internally by Tcl; the `flush`
3361 command may be used to force buffered characters to be output.
3367 Returns the path name of the current working directory.
3371 +*rand* '?min? ?max?'+
3373 Returns a random integer between +'min'+ (defaults to 0) and +'max'+
3374 (defaults to the maximum integer).
3376 If only one argument is given, it is interpreted as +'max'+.
3380 +*range* '?start? end ?step?'+
3382 Returns a list of integers starting at +'start'+ (defaults to 0)
3383 and ranging up to but not including +'end'+ in steps of +'step'+ defaults to 1).
3396 +*read* ?*-nonewline*? 'fileId'+
3398 +'fileId' *read* ?*-nonewline*?+
3400 +*read* 'fileId numBytes'+
3402 +'fileId' *read* 'numBytes'+
3405 In the first form, all of the remaining bytes are read from the file
3406 given by +'fileId'+; they are returned as the result of the command.
3407 If the +-nonewline+ switch is specified then the last
3408 character of the file is discarded if it is a newline.
3410 In the second form, the extra argument specifies how many bytes to read;
3411 exactly this many bytes will be read and returned, unless there are fewer than
3412 +'numBytes'+ bytes left in the file; in this case, all the remaining
3415 +'fileId'+ must be +stdin+ or the return value from a previous call
3416 to `open`; it must refer to a file that was opened for reading.
3420 +*regexp ?-nocase? ?-line? ?-indices? ?-start* 'offset'? *?-all? ?-inline? ?--?* 'exp string ?matchVar? ?subMatchVar subMatchVar \...?'+
3422 Determines whether the regular expression +'exp'+ matches part or
3423 all of +'string'+ and returns 1 if it does, 0 if it doesn't.
3425 See REGULAR EXPRESSIONS above for complete information on the
3426 syntax of +'exp'+ and how it is matched against +'string'+.
3428 If additional arguments are specified after +'string'+ then they
3429 are treated as the names of variables to use to return
3430 information about which part(s) of +'string'+ matched +'exp'+.
3431 +'matchVar'+ will be set to the range of +'string'+ that
3432 matched all of +'exp'+. The first +'subMatchVar'+ will contain
3433 the characters in +'string'+ that matched the leftmost parenthesized
3434 subexpression within +'exp'+, the next +'subMatchVar'+ will
3435 contain the characters that matched the next parenthesized
3436 subexpression to the right in +'exp'+, and so on.
3438 Normally, +'matchVar'+ and the each +'subMatchVar'+ are set to hold the
3439 matching characters from `string`, however see +-indices+ and
3442 If there are more values for +'subMatchVar'+ than parenthesized subexpressions
3443 within +'exp'+, or if a particular subexpression in +'exp'+ doesn't
3444 match the string (e.g. because it was in a portion of the expression
3445 that wasn't matched), then the corresponding +'subMatchVar'+ will be
3446 set to +"-1 -1"+ if +-indices+ has been specified or to an empty
3449 The following switches modify the behaviour of +'regexp'+
3452 Causes upper-case and lower-case characters to be treated as
3453 identical during the matching process.
3456 Use newline-sensitive matching. By default, newline
3457 is a completely ordinary character with no special meaning in
3458 either REs or strings. With this flag, +[^+ bracket expressions
3459 and +.+ never match newline, an +^+ anchor matches the null
3460 string after any newline in the string in addition to its normal
3461 function, and the +$+ anchor matches the null string before any
3462 newline in the string in addition to its normal function.
3465 Changes what is stored in the subMatchVars. Instead of
3466 storing the matching characters from string, each variable
3467 will contain a list of two decimal strings giving the indices
3468 in string of the first and last characters in the matching
3469 range of characters.
3471 +*-start* 'offset'+::
3472 Specifies a character index offset into the string at which to start
3473 matching the regular expression. If +-indices+ is
3474 specified, the indices will be indexed starting from the
3475 absolute beginning of the input string. +'offset'+ will be
3476 constrained to the bounds of the input string.
3479 Causes the regular expression to be matched as many times as possible
3480 in the string, returning the total number of matches found. If this
3481 is specified with match variables, they will contain information
3482 for the last match only.
3485 Causes the command to return, as a list, the data that would otherwise
3486 be placed in match variables. When using +-inline+, match variables
3487 may not be specified. If used with +-all+, the list will be concatenated
3488 at each iteration, such that a flat list is always returned. For
3489 each match iteration, the command will append the overall match
3490 data, plus one element for each subexpression in the regular
3494 Marks the end of switches. The argument following this one will be
3495 treated as +'exp'+ even if it starts with a +-+.
3499 +*regsub ?-nocase? ?-all? ?-line? ?-start* 'offset'? ?*--*? 'exp string subSpec ?varName?'+
3501 This command matches the regular expression +'exp'+ against
3502 +'string'+ using the rules described in REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
3505 If +'varName'+ is specified, the commands stores +'string'+ to +'varName'+
3506 with the substitutions detailed below, and returns the number of
3507 substitutions made (normally 1 unless +-all+ is specified).
3508 This is 0 if there were no matches.
3510 If +'varName'+ is not specified, the substituted string will be returned
3513 When copying +'string'+, the portion of +'string'+ that
3514 matched +'exp'+ is replaced with +'subSpec'+.
3515 If +'subSpec'+ contains a +&+ or +{backslash}0+, then it is replaced
3516 in the substitution with the portion of +'string'+ that
3519 If +'subSpec'+ contains a +{backslash}n+, where +'n'+ is a digit
3520 between 1 and 9, then it is replaced in the substitution with
3521 the portion of +'string'+ that matched the +'n'+\'-th
3522 parenthesized subexpression of +'exp'+.
3523 Additional backslashes may be used in +'subSpec'+ to prevent special
3524 interpretation of +&+ or +{backslash}0+ or +{backslash}n+ or
3527 The use of backslashes in +'subSpec'+ tends to interact badly
3528 with the Tcl parser's use of backslashes, so it's generally
3529 safest to enclose +'subSpec'+ in braces if it includes
3532 The following switches modify the behaviour of +'regsub'+
3535 Upper-case characters in +'string'+ are converted to lower-case
3536 before matching against +'exp'+; however, substitutions
3537 specified by +'subSpec'+ use the original unconverted form
3541 All ranges in +'string'+ that match +'exp'+ are found and substitution
3542 is performed for each of these ranges, rather than only the
3543 first. The +&+ and +{backslash}n+ sequences are handled for
3544 each substitution using the information from the corresponding
3548 Use newline-sensitive matching. By default, newline
3549 is a completely ordinary character with no special meaning in
3550 either REs or strings. With this flag, +[^+ bracket expressions
3551 and +.+ never match newline, an +^+ anchor matches the null
3552 string after any newline in the string in addition to its normal
3553 function, and the +$+ anchor matches the null string before any
3554 newline in the string in addition to its normal function.
3556 +*-start* 'offset'+::
3557 Specifies a character index offset into the string at which to
3558 start matching the regular expression. +'offset'+ will be
3559 constrained to the bounds of the input string.
3562 Marks the end of switches. The argument following this one will be
3563 treated as +'exp'+ even if it starts with a +-+.
3567 +*ref* 'string tag ?finalizer?'+
3569 Create a new reference containing +'string'+ of type +'tag'+.
3570 If +'finalizer'+ is specified, it is a command which will be invoked
3571 when the a garbage collection cycle runs and this reference is
3572 no longer accessible.
3574 The finalizer is invoked as:
3576 finalizer reference string
3578 See GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
3582 +*rename* 'oldName newName'+
3584 Rename the command that used to be called +'oldName'+ so that it
3585 is now called +'newName'+. If +'newName'+ is an empty string
3586 (e.g. {}) then +'oldName'+ is deleted. The `rename` command
3587 returns an empty string as result.
3591 +*return* ?*-code* 'code'? ?*-errorinfo* 'stacktrace'? ?*-errorcode* 'errorcode'? ?*-level* 'n'? ?'value'?+
3593 Return immediately from the current procedure (or top-level command
3594 or `source` command), with +'value'+ as the return value. If +'value'+
3595 is not specified, an empty string will be returned as result.
3597 If +-code+ is specified (as either a number or ok, error, break,
3598 continue, signal, return or exit), this code will be used instead
3599 of +JIM_OK+. This is generally useful when implementing flow of control
3602 If +-level+ is specified and greater than 1, it has the effect of delaying
3603 the new return code from +-code+. This is useful when rethrowing an error
3604 from `catch`. See the implementation of try/catch in tclcompat.tcl for
3605 an example of how this is done.
3607 Note: The following options are only used when +-code+ is JIM_ERR.
3609 If +-errorinfo+ is specified (as returned from `info stacktrace`)
3610 it is used to initialize the stacktrace.
3612 If +-errorcode+ is specified, it is used to set the global variable $::errorCode.
3616 +*scan* 'string format varName1 ?varName2 \...?'+
3618 This command parses fields from an input string in the same fashion
3619 as the C 'sscanf' procedure. +'string'+ gives the input to be parsed
3620 and +'format'+ indicates how to parse it, using '%' fields as in
3621 'sscanf'. All of the 'sscanf' options are valid; see the 'sscanf'
3622 man page for details. Each +'varName'+ gives the name of a variable;
3623 when a field is scanned from +'string'+, the result is converted back
3624 into a string and assigned to the corresponding +'varName'+. The
3625 only unusual conversion is for '%c'. For '%c' conversions a single
3626 character value is converted to a decimal string, which is then
3627 assigned to the corresponding +'varName'+; no field width may be
3628 specified for this conversion.
3632 +*seek* 'fileId offset ?origin?'+
3634 +'fileId' *seek* 'offset ?origin?'+
3636 Change the current access position for +'fileId'+.
3637 The +'offset'+ and +'origin'+ arguments specify the position at
3638 which the next read or write will occur for +'fileId'+.
3639 +'offset'+ must be a number (which may be negative) and +'origin'+
3640 must be one of the following:
3643 The new access position will be +'offset'+ bytes from the start
3647 The new access position will be +'offset'+ bytes from the current
3648 access position; a negative +'offset'+ moves the access position
3649 backwards in the file.
3652 The new access position will be +'offset'+ bytes from the end of
3653 the file. A negative +'offset'+ places the access position before
3654 the end-of-file, and a positive +'offset'+ places the access position
3655 after the end-of-file.
3657 The +'origin'+ argument defaults to +start+.
3659 +'fileId'+ must have been the return value from a previous call to
3660 `open`, or it may be +stdin+, +stdout+, or +stderr+ to refer to one
3661 of the standard I/O channels.
3663 This command returns an empty string.
3667 +*set* 'varName ?value?'+
3669 Returns the value of variable +'varName'+.
3671 If +'value'+ is specified, then set the value of +'varName'+ to +'value'+,
3672 creating a new variable if one doesn't already exist, and return
3675 If +'varName'+ contains an open parenthesis and ends with a
3676 close parenthesis, then it refers to an array element: the characters
3677 before the open parenthesis are the name of the array, and the characters
3678 between the parentheses are the index within the array.
3679 Otherwise +'varName'+ refers to a scalar variable.
3681 If no procedure is active, then +'varName'+ refers to a global
3684 If a procedure is active, then +'varName'+ refers to a parameter
3685 or local variable of the procedure, unless the +'global'+ command
3686 has been invoked to declare +'varName'+ to be global.
3688 The +::+ prefix may also be used to explicitly reference a variable
3689 in the global scope.
3693 +*setref* 'reference string'+
3695 Store a new string in +'reference'+, replacing the existing string.
3696 The reference must be a valid reference create with the `ref`
3699 See GARBAGE COLLECTION, REFERENCES, LAMBDA FUNCTION for more detail.
3703 Command for signal handling.
3705 See `kill` for the different forms which may be used to specify signals.
3707 Commands which return a list of signal names do so using the canonical form:
3710 +*signal handle* ?'signals \...'?+::
3711 If no signals are given, returns a list of all signals which are currently
3713 If signals are specified, these are added to the list of signals currently
3716 +*signal ignore* ?'signals \...'?+::
3717 If no signals are given, returns a lists all signals which are currently
3719 If signals are specified, these are added to the list of signals
3720 currently being ignored. These signals are still delivered, but
3721 are not considered by `catch -signal` or `try -signal`. Use
3722 `signal check` to determine which signals have occurred but
3725 +*signal default* ?'signals \...'?+::
3726 If no signals are given, returns a lists all signals which are currently have
3727 the default behaviour.
3728 If signals are specified, these are added to the list of signals which have
3729 the default behaviour.
3731 +*signal check ?-clear?* ?'signals \...'?+::
3732 Returns a list of signals which have been delivered to the process
3733 but are 'ignored'. If signals are specified, only that set of signals will
3734 be checked, otherwise all signals will be checked.
3735 If +-clear+ is specified, any signals returned are removed and will not be
3736 returned by subsequent calls to `signal check` unless delivered again.
3738 +*signal throw* ?'signal'?+::
3739 Raises the given signal, which defaults to +SIGINT+ if not specified.
3740 The behaviour is identical to:
3744 Note that `signal handle` and `signal ignore` represent two forms of signal
3745 handling. `signal handle` is used in conjunction with `catch -signal` or `try -signal`
3746 to immediately abort execution when the signal is delivered. Alternatively, `signal ignore`
3747 is used in conjunction with `signal check` to handle signal synchronously. Consider the
3750 Prevent a processing from taking too long
3752 signal handle SIGALRM
3755 .. possibly long running process ..
3758 puts stderr "Process took too long"
3761 Handle SIGHUP to reconfigure:
3763 signal ignore SIGHUP
3765 ... handle configuration/reconfiguration ...
3766 while {[signal check -clear SIGHUP] eq ""} {
3767 ... do processing ..
3769 # Received SIGHUP, so reconfigure
3776 Pauses for the given number of seconds, which may be a floating
3777 point value less than one to sleep for less than a second, or an
3778 integer to sleep for one or more seconds.
3782 +*source* 'fileName'+
3784 Read file +'fileName'+ and pass the contents to the Tcl interpreter
3785 as a sequence of commands to execute in the normal fashion. The return
3786 value of `source` is the return value of the last command executed
3787 from the file. If an error occurs in executing the contents of the
3788 file, then the `source` command will return that error.
3790 If a `return` command is invoked from within the file, the remainder of
3791 the file will be skipped and the `source` command will return
3792 normally with the result from the `return` command.
3796 +*split* 'string ?splitChars?'+
3798 Returns a list created by splitting +'string'+ at each character
3799 that is in the +'splitChars'+ argument.
3801 Each element of the result list will consist of the
3802 characters from +'string'+ between instances of the
3803 characters in +'splitChars'+.
3805 Empty list elements will be generated if +'string'+ contains
3806 adjacent characters in +'splitChars'+, or if the first or last
3807 character of +'string'+ is in +'splitChars'+.
3809 If +'splitChars'+ is an empty string then each character of
3810 +'string'+ becomes a separate element of the result list.
3812 +'splitChars'+ defaults to the standard white-space characters.
3815 split "comp.unix.misc" .
3817 returns +'"comp unix misc"'+ and
3819 split "Hello world" {}
3821 returns +'"H e l l o { } w o r l d"'+.
3826 +*stackdump* 'stacktrace'+
3828 Creates a human readable representation of a stack trace.
3835 Returns a live stack trace as a list of +proc file line proc file line \...+.
3836 Iteratively uses `info frame` to create the stack trace. This stack trace is in the
3837 same form as produced by `catch` and `info stacktrace`
3839 See also `stackdump`.
3844 +*string* 'option arg ?arg \...?'+
3846 Perform one of several string operations, depending on +'option'+.
3847 The legal options (which may be abbreviated) are:
3849 +*string bytelength* 'string'+::
3850 Returns the length of the string in bytes. This will return
3851 the same value as `string length` if UTF-8 support is not enabled,
3852 or if the string is composed entirely of ASCII characters.
3853 See UTF-8 AND UNICODE.
3855 +*string byterange* 'string first last'+::
3856 Like `string range` except works on bytes rather than characters.
3857 These commands are identical if UTF-8 support is not enabled.
3859 +*string cat* '?string1 string2 \...?'+::
3860 Concatenates the given strings into a single string.
3862 +*string compare ?-nocase?* ?*-length* 'len? string1 string2'+::
3863 Perform a character-by-character comparison of strings +'string1'+ and
3864 +'string2'+ in the same way as the C 'strcmp' procedure. Return
3865 -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether +'string1'+ is lexicographically
3866 less than, equal to, or greater than +'string2'+. If +-length+
3867 is specified, then only the first +'len'+ characters are used
3868 in the comparison. If +'len'+ is negative, it is ignored.
3869 Performs a case-insensitive comparison if +-nocase+ is specified.
3871 +*string equal ?-nocase?* '?*-length* len?' 'string1 string2'+::
3872 Returns 1 if the strings are equal, or 0 otherwise. If +-length+
3873 is specified, then only the first +'len'+ characters are used
3874 in the comparison. If +'len'+ is negative, it is ignored.
3875 Performs a case-insensitive comparison if +-nocase+ is specified.
3877 +*string first* 'string1 string2 ?firstIndex?'+::
3878 Search +'string2'+ for a sequence of characters that exactly match
3879 the characters in +'string1'+. If found, return the index of the
3880 first character in the first such match within +'string2'+. If not
3881 found, return -1. If +'firstIndex'+ is specified, matching will start
3882 from +'firstIndex'+ of +'string1'+.
3884 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'firstIndex'+.
3886 +*string index* 'string charIndex'+::
3887 Returns the +'charIndex'+'th character of the +'string'+
3888 argument. A +'charIndex'+ of 0 corresponds to the first
3889 character of the string.
3890 If +'charIndex'+ is less than 0 or greater than
3891 or equal to the length of the string then an empty string is
3894 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'charIndex'+.
3896 +*string is* 'class' ?*-strict*? 'string'+::
3897 Returns 1 if +'string'+ is a valid member of the specified character
3898 class, otherwise returns 0. If +-strict+ is specified, then an
3899 empty string returns 0, otherwise an empty string will return 1
3900 on any class. The following character classes are recognized
3901 (the class name can be abbreviated):
3903 +alnum+;; Any alphabet or digit character.
3904 +alpha+;; Any alphabet character.
3905 +ascii+;; Any character with a value less than 128 (those that are in the 7-bit ascii range).
3906 +control+;; Any control character.
3907 +digit+;; Any digit character.
3908 +double+;; Any of the valid forms for a double in Tcl, with optional surrounding whitespace.
3909 In case of under/overflow in the value, 0 is returned.
3910 +graph+;; Any printing character, except space.
3911 +integer+;; Any of the valid string formats for an integer value in Tcl, with optional surrounding whitespace.
3912 +lower+;; Any lower case alphabet character.
3913 +print+;; Any printing character, including space.
3914 +punct+;; Any punctuation character.
3915 +space+;; Any space character.
3916 +upper+;; Any upper case alphabet character.
3917 +xdigit+;; Any hexadecimal digit character ([0-9A-Fa-f]).
3919 Note that string classification does +'not'+ respect UTF-8. See UTF-8 AND UNICODE
3921 +*string last* 'string1 string2 ?lastIndex?'+::
3922 Search +'string2'+ for a sequence of characters that exactly match
3923 the characters in +'string1'+. If found, return the index of the
3924 first character in the last such match within +'string2'+. If there
3925 is no match, then return -1. If +'lastIndex'+ is specified, only characters
3926 up to +'lastIndex'+ of +'string2'+ will be considered in the match.
3928 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'lastIndex'+.
3930 +*string length* 'string'+::
3931 Returns a decimal string giving the number of characters in +'string'+.
3932 If UTF-8 support is enabled, this may be different than the number of bytes.
3933 See UTF-8 AND UNICODE
3935 +*string map ?-nocase?* 'mapping string'+::
3936 Replaces substrings in +'string'+ based on the key-value pairs in
3937 +'mapping'+, which is a list of +key value key value \...+ as in the form
3938 returned by `array get`. Each instance of a key in the string will be
3939 replaced with its corresponding value. If +-nocase+ is specified, then
3940 matching is done without regard to case differences. Both key and value may
3941 be multiple characters. Replacement is done in an ordered manner, so the
3942 key appearing first in the list will be checked first, and so on. +'string'+ is
3943 only iterated over once, so earlier key replacements will have no affect for
3944 later key matches. For example,
3946 string map {abc 1 ab 2 a 3 1 0} 1abcaababcabababc
3949 will return the string +01321221+.
3951 Note that if an earlier key is a prefix of a later one, it will completely mask the later
3952 one. So if the previous example is reordered like this,
3954 string map {1 0 ab 2 a 3 abc 1} 1abcaababcabababc
3957 it will return the string +02c322c222c+.
3959 +*string match ?-nocase?* 'pattern string'+::
3960 See if +'pattern'+ matches +'string'+; return 1 if it does, 0
3961 if it doesn't. Matching is done in a fashion similar to that
3962 used by the C-shell. For the two strings to match, their contents
3963 must be identical except that the following special sequences
3964 may appear in +'pattern'+:
3967 Matches any sequence of characters in +'string'+,
3968 including a null string.
3971 Matches any single character in +'string'+.
3974 Matches any character in the set given by +'chars'+.
3975 If a sequence of the form +'x-y'+ appears in +'chars'+,
3976 then any character between +'x'+ and +'y'+, inclusive,
3980 Matches the single character +'x'+. This provides a way of
3981 avoiding the special interpretation of the characters +{backslash}*?[]+
3984 Performs a case-insensitive comparison if +-nocase+ is specified.
3986 +*string range* 'string first last'+::
3987 Returns a range of consecutive characters from +'string'+, starting
3988 with the character whose index is +'first'+ and ending with the
3989 character whose index is +'last'+. An index of 0 refers to the
3990 first character of the string.
3992 See STRING AND LIST INDEX SPECIFICATIONS for all allowed forms for +'first'+ and +'last'+.
3994 If +'first'+ is less than zero then it is treated as if it were zero, and
3995 if +'last'+ is greater than or equal to the length of the string then
3996 it is treated as if it were +end+. If +'first'+ is greater than
3997 +'last'+ then an empty string is returned.
3999 +*string repeat* 'string count'+::
4000 Returns a new string consisting of +'string'+ repeated +'count'+ times.
4002 +*string replace* 'string first last ?newstring?'+::
4003 Removes a range of consecutive characters from +'string'+, starting
4004 with the character whose index is +'first'+ and ending with the
4005 character whose index is +'last'+. If +'newstring'+ is specified,
4006 then it is placed in the removed character range. If +'first'+ is
4007 less than zero then it is treated as if it were zero, and if +'last'+
4008 is greater than or equal to the length of the string then it is
4009 treated as if it were +end+. If +'first'+ is greater than +'last'+
4010 or the length of the initial string, or +'last'+ is less than 0,
4011 then the initial string is returned untouched.
4013 +*string reverse* 'string'+::
4014 Returns a string that is the same length as +'string'+ but
4015 with its characters in the reverse order.
4017 +*string tolower* 'string'+::
4018 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that all upper case
4019 letters have been converted to lower case.
4021 +*string totitle* 'string'+::
4022 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that the first character
4023 is converted to title case (or upper case if there is no UTF-8 titlecase variant)
4024 and all remaining characters have been converted to lower case.
4026 +*string toupper* 'string'+::
4027 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that all lower case
4028 letters have been converted to upper case.
4030 +*string trim* 'string ?chars?'+::
4031 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that any leading
4032 or trailing characters from the set given by +'chars'+ are
4034 If +'chars'+ is not specified then white space is removed
4035 (spaces, tabs, newlines, and carriage returns).
4037 +*string trimleft* 'string ?chars?'+::
4038 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that any
4039 leading characters from the set given by +'chars'+ are
4041 If +'chars'+ is not specified then white space is removed
4042 (spaces, tabs, newlines, and carriage returns).
4044 +*string trimright* 'string ?chars?'+::
4045 Returns a value equal to +'string'+ except that any
4046 trailing characters from the set given by +'chars'+ are
4048 If +'chars'+ is not specified then white space is removed
4049 (spaces, tabs, newlines, and carriage returns).
4050 Null characters are always removed.
4054 +*subst ?-nobackslashes? ?-nocommands? ?-novariables?* 'string'+
4056 This command performs variable substitutions, command substitutions,
4057 and backslash substitutions on its string argument and returns the
4058 fully-substituted result. The substitutions are performed in exactly
4059 the same way as for Tcl commands. As a result, the string argument
4060 is actually substituted twice, once by the Tcl parser in the usual
4061 fashion for Tcl commands, and again by the subst command.
4063 If any of the +-nobackslashes+, +-nocommands+, or +-novariables+ are
4064 specified, then the corresponding substitutions are not performed.
4065 For example, if +-nocommands+ is specified, no command substitution
4066 is performed: open and close brackets are treated as ordinary
4067 characters with no special interpretation.
4069 *Note*: when it performs its substitutions, subst does not give any
4070 special treatment to double quotes or curly braces. For example,
4071 the following script returns +xyz \{44\}+, not +xyz \{$a\}+.
4079 +*switch* '?options? string pattern body ?pattern body \...?'+
4081 +*switch* '?options? string {pattern body ?pattern body \...?}'+
4083 The `switch` command matches its string argument against each of
4084 the pattern arguments in order. As soon as it finds a pattern that
4085 matches string it evaluates the following body and returns the
4086 result of that evaluation. If the last pattern argument is default
4087 then it matches anything. If no pattern argument matches string and
4088 no default is given, then the `switch` command returns an empty string.
4089 If the initial arguments to switch start with - then they are treated
4090 as options. The following options are currently supported:
4093 Use exact matching when comparing string to a
4094 pattern. This is the default.
4097 When matching string to the patterns, use glob-style
4098 matching (i.e. the same as implemented by the string
4102 When matching string to the patterns, use regular
4103 expression matching (i.e. the same as implemented
4104 by the regexp command).
4106 +-command 'commandname'+::
4107 When matching string to the patterns, use the given command, which
4108 must be a single word. The command is invoked as
4109 'commandname pattern string', or 'commandname -nocase pattern string'
4110 and must return 1 if matched, or 0 if not.
4113 Marks the end of options. The argument following
4114 this one will be treated as string even if it starts
4117 Two syntaxes are provided for the pattern and body arguments. The
4118 first uses a separate argument for each of the patterns and commands;
4119 this form is convenient if substitutions are desired on some of the
4120 patterns or commands. The second form places all of the patterns
4121 and commands together into a single argument; the argument must
4122 have proper list structure, with the elements of the list being the
4123 patterns and commands. The second form makes it easy to construct
4124 multi-line `switch` commands, since the braces around the whole list
4125 make it unnecessary to include a backslash at the end of each line.
4126 Since the pattern arguments are in braces in the second form, no
4127 command or variable substitutions are performed on them; this makes
4128 the behaviour of the second form different than the first form in
4131 If a body is specified as +-+ it means that the body for the next
4132 pattern should also be used as the body for this pattern (if the
4133 next pattern also has a body of +-+ then the body after that is
4134 used, and so on). This feature makes it possible to share a single
4135 body among several patterns.
4137 Below are some examples of `switch` commands:
4139 switch abc a - b {format 1} abc {format 2} default {format 3}
4143 switch -regexp aaab {
4163 +*tailcall* 'cmd ?arg\...?'+
4165 The `tailcall` command provides an optimised way of invoking a command whilst replacing
4166 the current call frame. This is similar to 'exec' in Bourne Shell.
4168 The following are identical except the first immediately replaces the current call frame.
4172 return [uplevel 1 [list a b c]]
4174 `tailcall` is useful as a dispatch mechanism:
4177 tailcall sub_$cmd {*}$args
4188 Returns a decimal string giving the current access position in
4191 +'fileId'+ must have been the return value from a previous call to
4192 `open`, or it may be +stdin+, +stdout+, or +stderr+ to refer to one
4193 of the standard I/O channels.
4197 +*throw* 'code ?msg?'+
4199 This command throws an exception (return) code along with an optional message.
4200 This command is mostly for convenient usage with `try`.
4202 The command +throw break+ is equivalent to +break+.
4203 The command +throw 20 message+ can be caught with an +on 20 \...+ clause to `try`.
4207 +*time* 'command ?count?'+
4209 This command will call the Tcl interpreter +'count'+
4210 times to execute +'command'+ (or once if +'count'+ isn't
4211 specified). It will then return a string of the form
4213 503 microseconds per iteration
4215 which indicates the average amount of time required per iteration,
4218 Time is measured in elapsed time, not CPU time.
4222 +*try* '?catchopts? tryscript' ?*on* 'returncodes {?resultvar? ?optsvar?} handlerscript \...'? ?*finally* 'finalscript'?+
4224 The `try` command is provided as a convenience for exception handling.
4226 This interpeter first evaluates +'tryscript'+ under the effect of the catch
4227 options +'catchopts'+ (e.g. +-signal -noexit --+, see `catch`).
4229 It then evaluates the script for the first matching 'on' handler
4230 (there many be zero or more) based on the return code from the `try`
4231 section. For example a normal +JIM_ERR+ error will be matched by
4232 an 'on error' handler.
4234 Finally, any +'finalscript'+ is evaluated.
4236 The result of this command is the result of +'tryscript'+, except in the
4237 case where an exception occurs in a matching 'on' handler script or the 'finally' script,
4238 in which case the result is this new exception.
4240 The specified +'returncodes'+ is a list of return codes either as names ('ok', 'error', 'break', etc.)
4243 If +'resultvar'+ and +'optsvar'+ are specified, they are set as for `catch` before evaluating
4244 the matching handler.
4251 } on {continue break} {} {
4252 error "Unexpected break/continue"
4253 } on error {msg opts} {
4254 puts "Dealing with error"
4255 return {*}$opts $msg
4257 puts "Got signal: $sig"
4262 If break, continue or error are raised, they are dealt with by the matching
4265 In any case, the file will be closed via the 'finally' clause.
4267 See also `throw`, `catch`, `return`, `error`.
4271 +*unknown* 'cmdName ?arg arg ...?'+
4273 This command doesn't actually exist as part of Tcl, but Tcl will
4274 invoke it if it does exist.
4276 If the Tcl interpreter encounters a command name for which there
4277 is not a defined command, then Tcl checks for the existence of
4278 a command named `unknown`.
4280 If there is no such command, then the interpreter returns an
4283 If the `unknown` command exists, then it is invoked with
4284 arguments consisting of the fully-substituted name and arguments
4285 for the original non-existent command.
4287 The `unknown` command typically does things like searching
4288 through library directories for a command procedure with the name
4289 +'cmdName'+, or expanding abbreviated command names to full-length,
4290 or automatically executing unknown commands as UNIX sub-processes.
4292 In some cases (such as expanding abbreviations) `unknown` will
4293 change the original command slightly and then (re-)execute it.
4294 The result of the `unknown` command is used as the result for
4295 the original non-existent command.
4299 +*unset ?-nocomplain? ?--?* '?name name ...?'+
4302 Each +'name'+ is a variable name, specified in any of the
4303 ways acceptable to the `set` command.
4305 If a +'name'+ refers to an element of an array, then that
4306 element is removed without affecting the rest of the array.
4308 If a +'name'+ consists of an array name with no parenthesized
4309 index, then the entire array is deleted.
4311 The `unset` command returns an empty string as result.
4313 An error occurs if any of the variables doesn't exist, unless '-nocomplain'
4314 is specified. The '--' argument may be specified to stop option processing
4315 in case the variable name may be '-nocomplain'.
4319 +*upcall* 'command ?args ...?'+
4321 May be used from within a proc defined as `local` `proc` in order to call
4322 the previous, hidden version of the same command.
4324 If there is no previous definition of the command, an error is returned.
4328 +*uplevel* '?level? command ?command ...?'+
4330 All of the +'command'+ arguments are concatenated as if they had
4331 been passed to `concat`; the result is then evaluated in the
4332 variable context indicated by +'level'+. `uplevel` returns
4333 the result of that evaluation. If +'level'+ is an integer, then
4334 it gives a distance (up the procedure calling stack) to move before
4335 executing the command. If +'level'+ consists of +\#+ followed by
4336 a number then the number gives an absolute level number. If +'level'+
4337 is omitted then it defaults to +1+. +'level'+ cannot be
4338 defaulted if the first +'command'+ argument starts with a digit or +#+.
4340 For example, suppose that procedure 'a' was invoked
4341 from top-level, and that it called 'b', and that 'b' called 'c'.
4342 Suppose that 'c' invokes the `uplevel` command. If +'level'+
4343 is +1+ or +#2+ or omitted, then the command will be executed
4344 in the variable context of 'b'. If +'level'+ is +2+ or +#1+
4345 then the command will be executed in the variable context of 'a'.
4347 If +'level'+ is '3' or +#0+ then the command will be executed
4348 at top-level (only global variables will be visible).
4349 The `uplevel` command causes the invoking procedure to disappear
4350 from the procedure calling stack while the command is being executed.
4351 In the above example, suppose 'c' invokes the command
4353 uplevel 1 {set x 43; d}
4355 where 'd' is another Tcl procedure. The `set` command will
4356 modify the variable 'x' in 'b's context, and 'd' will execute
4357 at level 3, as if called from 'b'. If it in turn executes
4362 then the `set` command will modify the same variable 'x' in 'b's
4363 context: the procedure 'c' does not appear to be on the call stack
4364 when 'd' is executing. The command `info level` may
4365 be used to obtain the level of the current procedure.
4367 `uplevel` makes it possible to implement new control
4368 constructs as Tcl procedures (for example, `uplevel` could
4369 be used to implement the `while` construct as a Tcl procedure).
4373 +*upvar* '?level? otherVar myVar ?otherVar myVar ...?'+
4375 This command arranges for one or more local variables in the current
4376 procedure to refer to variables in an enclosing procedure call or
4377 to global variables.
4379 +'level'+ may have any of the forms permitted for the `uplevel`
4380 command, and may be omitted if the first letter of the first +'otherVar'+
4381 isn't +#+ or a digit (it defaults to '1').
4383 For each +'otherVar'+ argument, `upvar` makes the variable
4384 by that name in the procedure frame given by +'level'+ (or at
4385 global level, if +'level'+ is +#0+) accessible
4386 in the current procedure by the name given in the corresponding
4389 The variable named by +'otherVar'+ need not exist at the time of the
4390 call; it will be created the first time +'myVar'+ is referenced, just like
4391 an ordinary variable.
4393 `upvar` may only be invoked from within procedures.
4395 `upvar` returns an empty string.
4397 The `upvar` command simplifies the implementation of call-by-name
4398 procedure calling and also makes it easier to build new control constructs
4400 For example, consider the following procedure:
4407 'add2' is invoked with an argument giving the name of a variable,
4408 and it adds two to the value of that variable.
4409 Although 'add2' could have been implemented using `uplevel`
4410 instead of `upvar`, `upvar` makes it simpler for 'add2'
4411 to access the variable in the caller's procedure frame.
4415 +*while* 'test body'+
4417 The +'while'+ command evaluates +'test'+ as an expression
4418 (in the same way that `expr` evaluates its argument).
4419 The value of the expression must be numeric; if it is non-zero
4420 then +'body'+ is executed by passing it to the Tcl interpreter.
4422 Once +'body'+ has been executed then +'test'+ is evaluated
4423 again, and the process repeats until eventually +'test'+
4424 evaluates to a zero numeric value. `continue`
4425 commands may be executed inside +'body'+ to terminate the current
4426 iteration of the loop, and `break`
4427 commands may be executed inside +'body'+ to cause immediate
4428 termination of the `while` command.
4430 The `while` command always returns an empty string.
4435 The following extensions may or may not be available depending upon
4436 what options were selected when Jim Tcl was built.
4439 posix: os.fork, os.wait, os.gethostname, os.getids, os.uptime
4440 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4442 Invokes 'fork(2)' and returns the result.
4444 +*os.wait -nohang* 'pid'+::
4445 Invokes waitpid(2), with WNOHANG if +-nohang+ is specified.
4446 Returns a list of 3 elements.
4448 {0 none 0} if -nohang is specified, and the process is still alive.
4450 {-1 error <error-description>} if the process does not exist or has already been waited for.
4452 {<pid> exit <exit-status>} if the process exited normally.
4454 {<pid> signal <signal-number>} if the process terminated on a signal.
4456 {<pid> other 0} otherwise (core dump, stopped, continued, etc.)
4458 +*os.gethostname*+::
4459 Invokes 'gethostname(3)' and returns the result.
4462 Returns the various user/group ids for the current process.
4465 uid 1000 euid 1000 gid 100 egid 100
4468 Returns the number of seconds since system boot. See description of 'uptime' in 'sysinfo(2)'.
4470 ANSI I/O (aio) and EVENTLOOP API
4471 --------------------------------
4472 Jim provides an alternative object-based API for I/O.
4474 See `open` and `socket` for commands which return an I/O handle.
4478 +$handle *accept* ?addrvar?+::
4479 Server socket only: Accept a connection and return stream.
4480 If +'addrvar'+ is specified, the address of the connected client is stored
4481 in the named variable in the form 'addr:port'. See `socket` for details.
4483 +$handle *buffering none|line|full*+::
4484 Sets the buffering mode of the stream.
4486 +$handle *close* ?r(ead)|w(rite)?+::
4488 The two-argument form is a "half-close" on a socket. See the +shutdown(2)+ man page.
4490 +$handle *copyto* 'tofd ?size?'+::
4491 Copy bytes to the file descriptor +'tofd'+. If +'size'+ is specified, at most
4492 that many bytes will be copied. Otherwise copying continues until the end
4493 of the input file. Returns the number of bytes actually copied.
4496 Returns 1 if stream is at eof
4498 +$handle *filename*+::
4499 Returns the original filename associated with the handle.
4500 Handles returned by `socket` give the socket type instead of a filename.
4505 +$handle *gets* '?var?'+::
4506 Read one line and return it or store it in the var
4508 +$handle *isatty*+::
4509 Returns 1 if the stream is a tty device.
4511 +$handle *ndelay ?0|1?*+::
4512 Set O_NDELAY (if arg). Returns current/new setting.
4513 Note that in general ANSI I/O interacts badly with non-blocking I/O.
4516 +$handle *puts ?-nonewline?* 'str'+::
4517 Write the string, with newline unless -nonewline
4519 +$handle *read ?-nonewline?* '?len?'+::
4520 Read and return bytes from the stream. To eof if no len.
4522 +$handle *recvfrom* 'maxlen ?addrvar?'+::
4523 Receives a message from the handle via recvfrom(2) and returns it.
4524 At most +'maxlen'+ bytes are read.
4525 If +'addrvar'+ is specified, the sending address of the message is stored in
4526 the named variable in the form 'addr:port'. See `socket` for details.
4528 +$handle *seek* 'offset' *?start|current|end?*+::
4529 Seeks in the stream (default 'current')
4531 +$handle *sendto* 'str ?addr:?port'+::
4532 Sends the string, +'str'+, to the given address via the socket using sendto(2).
4533 This is intended for udp/dgram sockets and may give an error or behave in unintended
4534 ways for other handle types.
4535 Returns the number of bytes written.
4538 Flush the stream, then fsync(2) to commit any changes to storage.
4539 Only available on platforms that support fsync(2).
4542 Returns the current seek position
4546 +*fconfigure* 'handle' *?-blocking 0|1? ?-buffering noneline|full? ?-translation* 'mode'?+::
4547 For compatibility with Tcl, a limited form of the `fconfigure`
4548 command is supported.
4549 * `fconfigure ... -blocking` maps to `aio ndelay`
4550 * `fconfigure ... -buffering` maps to `aio buffering`
4551 * `fconfigure ... -translation` is accepted but ignored
4554 eventloop: after, vwait, update
4555 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4557 The following commands allow a script to be invoked when the given condition occurs.
4558 If no script is given, returns the current script. If the given script is the empty, the
4561 +$handle *readable* '?readable-script?'+::
4562 Sets or returns the script for when the socket is readable.
4564 +$handle *writable* '?writable-script?'+::
4565 Sets or returns the script for when the socket is writable.
4567 +$handle *onexception* '?exception-script?'+::
4568 Sets or returns the script for when oob data received.
4570 For compatibility with 'Tcl', these may be prefixed with `fileevent`. e.g.
4573 +fileevent $handle *readable* '\...'+
4575 Time-based execution is also available via the eventloop API.
4578 Sleeps for the given number of milliseconds. No events are
4579 processed during this time.
4581 +*after* 'ms'|*idle* 'script ?script \...?'+::
4582 The scripts are concatenated and executed after the given
4583 number of milliseconds have elapsed. If 'idle' is specified,
4584 the script will run the next time the event loop is processed
4585 with `vwait` or `update`. The script is only run once and
4586 then removed. Returns an event id.
4588 +*after cancel* 'id|command'+::
4589 Cancels an `after` event with the given event id or matching
4590 command (script). Returns the number of milliseconds
4591 remaining until the event would have fired. Returns the
4592 empty string if no matching event is found.
4594 +*after info* '?id?'+::
4595 If +'id'+ is not given, returns a list of current `after`
4596 events. If +'id'+ is given, returns a list containing the
4597 associated script and either 'timer' or 'idle' to indicated
4598 the type of the event. An error occurs if +'id'+ does not
4601 +*vwait* 'variable'+::
4602 A call to `vwait` is enters the eventloop. `vwait` processes
4603 events until the named (global) variable changes or all
4604 event handlers are removed. The variable need not exist
4605 beforehand. If there are no event handlers defined, `vwait`
4606 returns immediately.
4608 +*update ?idletasks?*+::
4609 A call to `update` enters the eventloop to process expired events, but
4610 no new events. If 'idletasks' is specified, only expired time events are handled,
4612 Returns once handlers have been run for all expired events.
4614 Scripts are executed at the global scope. If an error occurs during a handler script,
4615 an attempt is made to call (the user-defined command) `bgerror` with the details of the error.
4616 If the `bgerror` command does not exist, the error message details are printed to stderr instead.
4618 If a file event handler script generates an error, the handler is automatically removed
4619 to prevent infinite errors. (A time event handler is always removed after execution).
4622 Called when an event handler script generates an error. Note that the normal command resolution
4623 rules are used for bgerror. First the name is resolved in the current namespace, then in the
4628 Various socket types may be created.
4630 +*socket unix* 'path'+::
4631 A unix domain socket client.
4633 +*socket unix.server* 'path'+::
4634 A unix domain socket server.
4636 +*socket ?-ipv6? stream* 'addr:port'+::
4637 A TCP socket client. (See the forms for +'addr'+ below)
4639 +*socket ?-ipv6? stream.server* '?addr:?port'+::
4640 A TCP socket server (+'addr'+ defaults to +0.0.0.0+ for IPv4 or +[::]+ for IPv6).
4642 +*socket ?-ipv6? dgram* ?'addr:port'?+::
4643 A UDP socket client. If the address is not specified,
4644 the client socket will be unbound and 'sendto' must be used
4645 to indicated the destination.
4647 +*socket ?-ipv6? dgram.server* 'addr:port'+::
4648 A UDP socket server.
4651 A pipe. Note that unlike all other socket types, this command returns
4652 a list of two channels: {read write}
4655 A socketpair (see socketpair(2)). Like `socket pipe`, this command returns
4656 a list of two channels: {s1 s2}. These channels are both readable and writable.
4658 This command creates a socket connected (client) or bound (server) to the given
4661 The returned value is channel and may generally be used with the various file I/O
4662 commands (gets, puts, read, etc.), either as object-based syntax or Tcl-compatible syntax.
4664 set f [socket stream www.google.com:80]
4666 $f puts -nonewline "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n"
4671 Server sockets, however support only 'accept', which is most useful in conjunction with
4674 set f [socket stream.server 80]
4676 set client [$f accept]
4679 $client puts -nonewline "HTTP/1.1 404 Not found\r\n"
4684 The address, +'addr'+, can be given in one of the following forms:
4686 1. For IPv4 socket types, an IPv4 address such as 192.168.1.1
4687 2. For IPv6 socket types, an IPv6 address such as [fe80::1234] or [::]
4690 Note that on many systems, listening on an IPv6 address such as [::] will
4691 also accept requests via IPv4.
4693 Where a hostname is specified, the +'first'+ returned address is used
4694 which matches the socket type is used.
4696 The special type 'pipe' isn't really a socket.
4698 lassign [socket pipe] r w
4700 # Must close $w after exec
4708 +*syslog* '?options? ?priority? message'+
4710 This command sends message to system syslog facility with given
4711 priority. Valid priorities are:
4713 emerg, alert, crit, err, error, warning, notice, info, debug
4715 If a message is specified, but no priority is specified, then a
4716 priority of info is used.
4718 By default, facility user is used and the value of global tcl variable
4719 argv0 is used as ident string. However, any of the following options
4720 may be specified before priority to control these parameters:
4722 +*-facility* 'value'+::
4723 Use specified facility instead of user. The following
4724 values for facility are recognized:
4726 authpriv, cron, daemon, kernel, lpr, mail, news, syslog, user,
4729 +*-ident* 'string'+::
4730 Use given string instead of argv0 variable for ident string.
4732 +*-options* 'integer'+::
4733 Set syslog options such as +LOG_CONS+, +LOG_NDELAY+. You should
4734 use numeric values of those from your system syslog.h file,
4735 because I haven't got time to implement yet another hash
4740 The optional 'pack' extension provides commands to encode and decode binary strings.
4742 +*pack* 'varName value' *-intle|-intbe|-floatle|-floatbe|-str* 'bitwidth ?bitoffset?'+::
4743 Packs the binary representation of +'value'+ into the variable
4744 +'varName'+. The value is packed according to the given type
4745 (integer/floating point/string, big-endian/little-endian), width and bit offset.
4746 The variable is created if necessary (like `append`).
4747 The variable is expanded if necessary.
4749 +*unpack* 'binvalue' *-intbe|-intle|-uintbe|-uintle|-floatbe|-floatle|-str* 'bitpos bitwidth'+::
4750 Unpacks bits from +'binvalue'+ at bit position +'bitpos'+ and with +'bitwidth'+.
4751 Interprets the value according to the type (integer/floating point/string, big-endian/little-endian
4752 and signed/unsigned) and returns it. For integer types, +'bitwidth'+
4753 may be up to the size of a Jim Tcl integer (typically 64 bits). For floating point types,
4754 +'bitwidth'+ may be 32 bits (for single precision numbers) or 64 bits (for double precision).
4755 For the string type, both the width and the offset must be on a byte boundary (multiple of 8). Attempting to
4756 access outside the length of the value will return 0 for integer types, 0.0 for floating point types
4757 or the empty string for the string type.
4761 The optional, pure-Tcl 'binary' extension provides the Tcl-compatible `binary scan` and `binary format`
4762 commands based on the low-level `pack` and `unpack` commands.
4764 See the Tcl documentation at: http://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.5/TclCmd/binary.htm
4766 Note that 'binary format' with f/r/R specifiers (single-precision float) uses the value of Infinity
4767 in case of overflow.
4771 The optional, pure-Tcl 'oo' extension provides object-oriented (OO) support for Jim Tcl.
4773 See the online documentation (http://jim.tcl.tk/index.html/doc/www/www/documentation/oo/) for more details.
4775 +*class* 'classname ?baseclasses? classvars'+::
4776 Create a new class, +'classname'+, with the given dictionary
4777 (+'classvars'+) as class variables. These are the initial variables
4778 which all newly created objects of this class are initialised with.
4779 If a list of baseclasses is given, methods and instance variables
4782 +*super* 'method ?args \...?'+::
4783 From within a method, invokes the given method on the base class.
4784 Note that this will only call the last baseclass given.
4788 The optional, pure-Tcl 'tree' extension implements an OO, general purpose tree structure
4789 similar to that provided by tcllib ::struct::tree (http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/doc/trunk/embedded/www/tcllib/files/modules/struct/struct_tree.html)
4791 A tree is a collection of nodes, where each node (except the root node) has a single parent
4792 and zero or more child nodes (ordered), as well as zero or more attribute/value pairs.
4795 Creates and returns a new tree object with a single node named "root".
4796 All operations on the tree are invoked through this object.
4799 Destroy the tree and all it's nodes. (Note that the tree will also
4800 be automatically garbage collected once it goes out of scope).
4802 +$tree *set* 'nodename key value'+::
4803 Set the value for the given attribute key.
4805 +$tree *lappend* 'nodename key value \...'+::
4806 Append to the (list) value(s) for the given attribute key, or set if not yet set.
4808 +$tree *keyexists* 'nodename key'+::
4809 Returns 1 if the given attribute key exists.
4811 +$tree *get* 'nodename key'+::
4812 Returns the value associated with the given attribute key.
4814 +$tree *getall* 'nodename'+::
4815 Returns the entire attribute dictionary associated with the given key.
4817 +$tree *depth* 'nodename'+::
4818 Returns the depth of the given node. The depth of "root" is 0.
4820 +$tree *parent* 'nodename'+::
4821 Returns the node name of the parent node, or "" for the root node.
4823 +$tree *numchildren* 'nodename'+::
4824 Returns the number of child nodes.
4826 +$tree *children* 'nodename'+::
4827 Returns a list of the child nodes.
4829 +$tree *next* 'nodename'+::
4830 Returns the next sibling node, or "" if none.
4832 +$tree *insert* 'nodename ?index?'+::
4833 Add a new child node to the given node. The index is a list index
4834 such as +3+ or +end-2+. The default index is +end+.
4835 Returns the name of the newly added node.
4837 +$tree *walk* 'nodename' *dfs|bfs* {'actionvar nodevar'} 'script'+::
4838 Walks the tree starting from the given node, either breadth first (+bfs+)
4839 depth first (+dfs+).
4840 The value +"enter"+ or +"exit"+ is stored in variable +'actionvar'+.
4841 The name of each node is stored in +'nodevar'+.
4842 The script is evaluated twice for each node, on entry and exit.
4845 Dumps the tree contents to stdout
4849 The optional tclprefix extension provides the Tcl8.6-compatible 'tcl::prefix' command
4850 (http://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.6/TclCmd/prefix.htm) for matching strings against a table
4851 of possible values (typically commands or options).
4853 +*tcl::prefix all* 'table string'+::
4854 Returns a list of all elements in +'table'+ that begin with the prefix +'string'+.
4856 +*tcl::prefix longest* 'table string'+::
4857 Returns the longest common prefix of all elements in +'table'+ that begin with the prefix +'string'+.
4859 +*tcl::prefix match* '?options? table string'+::
4860 If +'string'+ equals one element in +'table'+ or is a prefix to
4861 exactly one element, the matched element is returned. If not, the
4862 result depends on the +-error+ option.
4864 * +*-exact*+ Accept only exact matches.
4865 * +*-message* 'string'+ Use +'string'+ in the error message at a mismatch. Default is "option".
4866 * +*-error* 'options'+ The options are used when no match is found. If +'options'+ is
4867 empty, no error is generated and an empty string is returned.
4868 Otherwise the options are used as return options when
4869 generating the error message. The default corresponds to
4874 The optional history extension provides script access to the command line editing
4875 and history support available in 'jimsh'. See 'examples/jtclsh.tcl' for an example.
4876 Note: if line editing support is not available, `history getline` acts like `gets` and
4877 the remaining subcommands do nothing.
4879 +*history load* 'filename'+::
4880 Load history from a (text) file. If the file does not exist or is not readable,
4883 +*history getline* 'prompt ?varname?'+::
4884 Displays the given prompt and allows a line to be entered. Similarly to `gets`,
4885 if +'varname'+ is given, it receives the line and the length of the line is returned,
4886 or -1 on EOF. If +'varname'+ is not given, the line is returned directly.
4888 +*history add* 'line'+::
4889 Adds the given line to the history buffer.
4891 +*history save* 'filename'+::
4892 Saves the current history buffer to the given file.
4895 Displays the current history buffer to standard output.
4899 Provides namespace-related functions. See also: http://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.6/TclCmd/namespace.htm
4901 +*namespace code* 'script'+::
4902 Captures the current namespace context for later execution of
4903 the script +'script'+. It returns a new script in which script has
4904 been wrapped in a +*namespace inscope*+ command.
4906 +*namespace current*+::
4907 Returns the fully-qualified name for the current namespace.
4909 +*namespace delete* '?namespace ...?'+::
4910 Deletes all commands and variables with the given namespace prefixes.
4912 +*namespace eval* 'namespace arg ?arg...?'+::
4913 Activates a namespace called +'namespace'+ and evaluates some code in that context.
4915 +*namespace origin* 'command'+::
4916 Returns the fully-qualified name of the original command to which the imported command +'command'+ refers.
4918 +*namespace parent* ?namespace?+::
4919 Returns the fully-qualified name of the parent namespace for namespace +'namespace'+, if given, otherwise
4920 for the current namespace.
4922 +*namespace qualifiers* 'string'+::
4923 Returns any leading namespace qualifiers for +'string'+
4925 +*namespace tail* 'string'+::
4926 Returns the simple name at the end of a qualified string.
4928 +*namespace upvar* 'namespace ?arg...?'+::
4929 This command arranges for zero or more local variables in the current procedure to refer to variables in +'namespace'+
4931 +*namespace which* '?-command|-variable? name'+::
4932 Looks up +'name'+ as either a command (the default) or variable and returns its fully-qualified name.
4934 [[BuiltinVariables]]
4938 The following global variables are created automatically
4942 This variable is set by Jim as an array
4943 whose elements are the environment variables for the process.
4944 Reading an element will return the value of the corresponding
4945 environment variable.
4946 This array is initialised at startup from the `env` command.
4947 It may be modified and will affect the environment passed to
4948 commands invoked with `exec`.
4951 This variable is set by Jim as an array containing information
4952 about the platform on which Jim was built. Currently this includes
4953 'os' and 'platform'.
4956 This variable contains a list of paths to search for packages.
4957 It defaults to a location based on where jim is installed
4958 (e.g. +/usr/local/lib/jim+), but may be changed by +jimsh+
4959 or the embedding application. Note that +jimsh+ will consider
4960 the environment variable +$JIMLIB+ to be a list of colon-separated
4961 list of paths to add to +*auto_path*+.
4964 This variable holds the value of the -errorcode return
4965 option set by the most recent error that occurred in this
4966 interpreter. This list value represents additional information
4967 about the error in a form that is easy to process with
4968 programs. The first element of the list identifies a general
4969 class of errors, and determines the format of the rest of
4970 the list. The following formats for -errorcode return options
4971 are used by the Tcl core; individual applications may define
4972 additional formats. Currently only `exec` sets this variable.
4973 Otherwise it will be +NONE+.
4975 The following global variables are set by jimsh.
4977 +*tcl_interactive*+::
4978 This variable is set to 1 if jimsh is started in interactive mode
4982 This variable is set by Jim as an array containing information
4983 about the platform upon which Jim was built. The following is an
4984 example of the contents of this array.
4986 tcl_platform(byteOrder) = littleEndian
4987 tcl_platform(os) = Darwin
4988 tcl_platform(platform) = unix
4989 tcl_platform(pointerSize) = 8
4990 tcl_platform(threaded) = 0
4991 tcl_platform(wordSize) = 8
4992 tcl_platform(pathSeparator) = :
4995 If jimsh is invoked to run a script, this variable contains the name
4999 If jimsh is invoked to run a script, this variable contains a list
5000 of any arguments supplied to the script.
5003 If jimsh is invoked to run a script, this variable contains the number
5004 of arguments supplied to the script.
5007 The value of argv[0] when jimsh was invoked.
5009 CHANGES IN PREVIOUS RELEASES
5010 ----------------------------
5014 1. +platform_tcl()+ settings are now automatically determined
5015 2. Add aio `$handle filename`
5016 3. Add `info channels`
5017 4. The 'bio' extension is gone. Now `aio` supports 'copyto'.
5018 5. Add `exists` command
5019 6. Add the pure-Tcl 'oo' extension
5020 7. The `exec` command now only uses vfork(), not fork()
5021 8. Unit test framework is less verbose and more Tcl-compatible
5022 9. Optional UTF-8 support
5023 10. Optional built-in regexp engine for better Tcl compatibility and UTF-8 support
5024 11. Command line editing in interactive mode, e.g. 'jimsh'
5028 1. `source` now checks that a script is complete (.i.e. not missing a brace)
5029 2. 'info complete' now uses the real parser and so is 100% accurate
5030 3. Better access to live stack frames with 'info frame', `stacktrace` and `stackdump`
5031 4. `tailcall` no longer loses stack trace information
5032 5. Add `alias` and `curry`
5033 6. `lambda`, `alias` and `curry` are implemented via `tailcall` for efficiency
5034 7. `local` allows procedures to be deleted automatically at the end of the current procedure
5035 8. udp sockets are now supported for both clients and servers.
5036 9. vfork-based exec is now working correctly
5037 10. Add 'file tempfile'
5038 11. Add 'socket pipe'
5039 12. Enhance 'try ... on ... finally' to be more Tcl 8.6 compatible
5040 13. It is now possible to `return` from within `try`
5041 14. IPv6 support is now included
5043 16. Event handlers works better if an error occurs. eof handler has been removed.
5044 17. `exec` now sets $::errorCode, and catch sets opts(-errorcode) for exit status
5045 18. Command pipelines via open "|..." are now supported
5046 19. `pid` can now return pids of a command pipeline
5047 20. Add 'info references'
5048 21. Add support for 'after +'ms'+', 'after idle', 'after info', `update`
5049 22. `exec` now sets environment based on $::env
5051 24. Add support for 'lsort -index'
5055 1. Add support to `exec` for '>&', '>>&', '|&', '2>@1'
5056 2. Fix `exec` error messages when special token (e.g. '>') is the last token
5057 3. Fix `subst` handling of backslash escapes.
5058 4. Allow abbreviated options for `subst`
5059 5. Add support for `return`, `break`, `continue` in subst
5060 6. Many `expr` bug fixes
5061 7. Add support for functions in `expr` (e.g. int(), abs()), and also 'in', 'ni' list operations
5062 8. The variable name argument to `regsub` is now optional
5063 9. Add support for 'unset -nocomplain'
5064 10. Add support for list commands: `lassign`, `lrepeat`
5065 11. Fully-functional `lsearch` is now implemented
5066 12. Add 'info nameofexecutable' and 'info returncodes'
5067 13. Allow `catch` to determine what return codes are caught
5068 14. Allow `incr` to increment an unset variable by first setting to 0
5069 15. Allow 'args' and optional arguments to the left or required arguments in `proc`
5071 17. Add 'try ... finally' command
5077 Copyright 2005 Salvatore Sanfilippo <antirez@invece.org>
5078 Copyright 2005 Clemens Hintze <c.hintze@gmx.net>
5079 Copyright 2005 patthoyts - Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sf.net>
5080 Copyright 2008 oharboe - Oyvind Harboe - oyvind.harboe@zylin.com
5081 Copyright 2008 Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
5082 Copyright 2008 Duane Ellis <openocd@duaneellis.com>
5083 Copyright 2008 Uwe Klein <uklein@klein-messgeraete.de>
5084 Copyright 2009 Steve Bennett <steveb@workware.net.au>
5087 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5088 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
5090 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
5091 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
5092 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
5093 copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
5094 disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
5095 provided with the distribution.
5097 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE JIM TCL PROJECT ``AS IS'' AND ANY
5098 EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
5099 THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
5100 PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
5101 JIM TCL PROJECT OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
5102 INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
5103 (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
5104 OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
5105 HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
5106 STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
5107 ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
5108 ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
5110 The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation
5111 are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing
5112 official policies, either expressed or implied, of the Jim Tcl Project.