library(n) Tcl Built-In Commands library(n)______________________________________________________________________________NAMElibrary - standard library of Tcl procedures
SYNOPSIS
auto_execok cmd
auto_load cmd
auto_mkindex dir pattern pattern ...
auto_mkindex_old dir pattern pattern ...
auto_reset
tcl_findLibrary basename version patch initScript enVarName varName
parray arrayName
tcl_endOfWord str start │
tcl_startOfNextWord str start │
tcl_startOfPreviousWord str start │
tcl_wordBreakAfter str start │
tcl_wordBreakBefore str start │
_________________________________________________________________INTRODUCTION
Tcl includes a library of Tcl procedures for commonly-needed functions.
The procedures defined in the Tcl library are generic ones suitable for
use by many different applications. The location of the Tcl library is
returned by the info library command. In addition to the Tcl library,
each application will normally have its own library of support proce‐
dures as well; the location of this library is normally given by the
value of the $app_library global variable, where app is the name of the
application. For example, the location of the Tk library is kept in
the variable $tk_library.
To access the procedures in the Tcl library, an application should
source the file init.tcl in the library, for example with the Tcl com‐
mand
source [file join [info library] init.tcl]
If the library procedure Tcl_Init is invoked from an application's
Tcl_AppInit procedure, this happens automatically. The code in
init.tcl will define the unknown procedure and arrange for the other
procedures to be loaded on-demand using the auto-load mechanism defined
below.
COMMAND PROCEDURES
The following procedures are provided in the Tcl library:
auto_execok cmd
Determines whether there is an executable file by the name cmd.
This command examines the directories in the current search path
(given by the PATH environment variable) to see if there is an
executable file named cmd in any of those directories. If so,
it returns 1; if not it returns 0. Auto_exec remembers infor‐
mation about previous searches in an array named auto_execs;
this avoids the path search in future calls for the same cmd.
The command auto_reset may be used to force auto_execok to for‐
get its cached information.
auto_load cmd
This command attempts to load the definition for a Tcl command
named cmd. To do this, it searches an auto-load path, which is
a list of one or more directories. The auto-load path is given
by the global variable $auto_path if it exists. If there is no
$auto_path variable, then the TCLLIBPATH environment variable is
used, if it exists. Otherwise the auto-load path consists of
just the Tcl library directory. Within each directory in the
auto-load path there must be a file tclIndex that describes one
or more commands defined in that directory and a script to eval‐
uate to load each of the commands. The tclIndex file should be
generated with the auto_mkindex command. If cmd is found in an
index file, then the appropriate script is evaluated to create
the command. The auto_load command returns 1 if cmd was suc‐
cessfully created. The command returns 0 if there was no index
entry for cmd or if the script didn't actually define cmd (e.g.
because index information is out of date). If an error occurs
while processing the script, then that error is returned.
Auto_load only reads the index information once and saves it in
the array auto_index; future calls to auto_load check for cmd
in the array rather than re-reading the index files. The cached
index information may be deleted with the command auto_reset.
This will force the next auto_load command to reload the index
database from disk.
auto_mkindex dir pattern pattern ...
Generates an index suitable for use by auto_load. The command
searches dir for all files whose names match any of the pattern
arguments (matching is done with the glob command), generates an
index of all the Tcl command procedures defined in all the
matching files, and stores the index information in a file named
tclIndex in dir. If no pattern is given a pattern of *.tcl will
be assumed. For example, the command
auto_mkindex foo *.tcl
will read all the .tcl files in subdirectory foo and generate a
new index file foo/tclIndex.
Auto_mkindex parses the Tcl scripts by sourcing them into a
slave interpreter and monitoring the proc and namespace commands
that are executed. Extensions can use the (undocumented)
auto_mkindex_parser package to register other commands that can
contribute to the auto_load index. You will have to read
through init.tcl to see how this works.
Auto_mkindex_old parses the Tcl scripts in a relatively unso‐
phisticated way: if any line contains the word proc as its
first characters then it is assumed to be a procedure definition
and the next word of the line is taken as the procedure's name.
Procedure definitions that don't appear in this way (e.g. they
have spaces before the proc) will not be indexed.
auto_reset
Destroys all the information cached by auto_execok and
auto_load. This information will be re-read from disk the next
time it is needed. Auto_reset also deletes any procedures
listed in the auto-load index, so that fresh copies of them will
be loaded the next time that they're used.
tcl_findLibrary basename version patch initScript enVarName varName
This is a standard search procedure for use by extensions during
their initialization. They call this procedure to look for
their script library in several standard directories. The last
component of the name of the library directory is normally base‐
nameversion (e.g., tk8.0), but it might be "library" when in the
build hierarchies. The initScript file will be sourced into the
interpreter once it is found. The directory in which this file
is found is stored into the global variable varName. If this
variable is already defined (e.g., by C code during application
initialization) then no searching is done. Otherwise the search
looks in these directories: the directory named by the environ‐
ment variable enVarName; relative to the Tcl library directory;
relative to the executable file in the standard installation bin
or bin/arch directory; relative to the executable file in the
current build tree; relative to the executable file in a paral‐
lel build tree.
parray arrayName
Prints on standard output the names and values of all the ele‐
ments in the array arrayName. ArrayName must be an array acces‐
sible to the caller of parray. It may be either local or
global.
tcl_endOfWord str start
Returns the index of the first end-of-word location that occurs │
after a starting index start in the string str. An end-of-word │
location is defined to be the first non-word character following │
the first word character after the starting point. Returns -1 │
if there are no more end-of-word locations after the starting │
point. See the description of tcl_wordchars and tcl_nonword‐ │
chars below for more details on how Tcl determines which charac‐ │
ters are word characters. │
tcl_startOfNextWord str start │
Returns the index of the first start-of-word location that │
occurs after a starting index start in the string str. A start- │
of-word location is defined to be the first word character fol‐ │
lowing a non-word character. Returns -1 if there are no more │
start-of-word locations after the starting point. │
tcl_startOfPreviousWord str start │
Returns the index of the first start-of-word location that │
occurs before a starting index start in the string str. Returns │
-1 if there are no more start-of-word locations before the │
starting point. │
tcl_wordBreakAfter str start │
Returns the index of the first word boundary after the starting │
index start in the string str. Returns -1 if there are no more │
boundaries after the starting point in the given string. The │
index returned refers to the second character of the pair that │
comprises a boundary. │
tcl_wordBreakBefore str start │
Returns the index of the first word boundary before the starting │
index start in the string str. Returns -1 if there are no more │
boundaries before the starting point in the given string. The │
index returned refers to the second character of the pair that │
comprises a boundary.
VARIABLES
The following global variables are defined or used by the procedures in
the Tcl library:
auto_execs
Used by auto_execok to record information about whether particu‐
lar commands exist as executable files.
auto_index
Used by auto_load to save the index information read from disk.
auto_noexec
If set to any value, then unknown will not attempt to auto-exec
any commands.
auto_noload
If set to any value, then unknown will not attempt to auto-load
any commands.
auto_path
If set, then it must contain a valid Tcl list giving directories
to search during auto-load operations. This variable is ini‐
tialized during startup to contain, in order: the directories
listed in the TCLLIBPATH environment variable, the directory
named by the $tcl_library variable, the parent directory of
$tcl_library, the directories listed in the $tcl_pkgPath vari‐
able.
env(TCL_LIBRARY)
If set, then it specifies the location of the directory contain‐
ing library scripts (the value of this variable will be assigned
to the tcl_library variable and therefore returned by the com‐
mand info library). If this variable isn't set then a default
value is used.
env(TCLLIBPATH)
If set, then it must contain a valid Tcl list giving directories
to search during auto-load operations. This variable is only
used when initializing the auto_path variable.
tcl_nonwordchars
This variable contains a regular expression that is used by rou‐ │
tines like tcl_endOfWord to identify whether a character is part │
of a word or not. If the pattern matches a character, the char‐ │
acter is considered to be a non-word character. On Windows │
platforms, spaces, tabs, and newlines are considered non-word │
characters. Under Unix, everything but numbers, letters and │
underscores are considered non-word characters. │
tcl_wordchars │
This variable contains a regular expression that is used by rou‐ │
tines like tcl_endOfWord to identify whether a character is part │
of a word or not. If the pattern matches a character, the char‐ │
acter is considered to be a word character. On Windows plat‐ │
forms, words are comprised of any character that is not a space, │
tab, or newline. Under Unix, words are comprised of numbers, │
letters or underscores.
unknown_active
This variable is set by unknown to indicate that it is active.
It is used to detect errors where unknown recurses on itself in‐
finitely. The variable is unset before unknown returns.
KEYWORDS
auto-exec, auto-load, library, unknown, word, whitespace
Tcl 8.0 library(n)