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tcl.html.markdown
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tcl.html.markdown
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---
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language: Tcl
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contributors:
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- ["Poor Yorick", "http://pooryorick.com/"]
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filename: learntcl
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---
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Tcl was created by [John Ousterhout](http://wiki.tcl.tk/John Ousterout) as a
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reusable scripting language for chip design tools he was creating. In 1997 he
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was awarded the [ACM Software System
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Award](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACM_Software_System_Award) for Tcl. Tcl
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can be used both as an embeddable scripting language and as a general
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programming language. It can also be used as a portable C library, even in
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cases where no scripting capability is needed, as it provides data structures
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such as dynamic strings, lists, and hash tables. The C library also provides
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portable functionality for loading dynamic libraries, string formatting and
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code conversion, filesystem operations, network operations, and more.
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Tcl is a pleasure to program in. Its discipline of exposing all programmatic
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functionality as commands, including things like loops and mathematical
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operations that are usually baked into the syntax of other languages, allows it
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to fade into the background of whatever domain-specific functionality a project
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needs. Its design of exposing all values as strings, while internally caching
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a structured representation, bridges the world of scripting and systems
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programming in the best way. Even Lisp is more syntactically heavy than Tcl.
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```tcl
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#! /bin/env tclsh
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################################################################################
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## 1. Guidelines
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################################################################################
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# Tcl is not Bash or C! This needs to be said because standard shell quoting
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# habits almost work in Tcl and it is common for people to pick up Tcl and try
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# to get by with syntax they know from another language. It works at first,
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# but soon leads to frustration with more complex scripts.
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# Braces are just a quoting mechanism, not a code block constructor or a list
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# constructor. Tcl doesn't have either of those things. Braces are used,
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# though, to escape special characters in procedure bodies and in strings that
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# are formatted as lists.
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################################################################################
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## 2. Syntax
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################################################################################
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# Every line is a command. The first word is the name of the command, and
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# subsequent words are arguments to the command. Words are delimited by
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# whitespace. Since every word is a string, no escaping is necessary in the
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# simple case.
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set greeting1 Sal
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set greeting2 ut
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set greeting3 ations
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#semicolon also delimits commands
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set greeting1 Sal; set greeting2 ut; set greeting3 ations
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# Dollar sign introduces variable substitution
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set greeting $greeting1$greeting2
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# Bracket introduces command substitution
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set greeting $greeting[set greeting3]
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# backslash suppresses the special meaning of characters
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set amount \$16.42
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# backslash adds special meaning to certain characters
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puts lots\nof\n\n\n\n\n\nnewlines
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# A word enclosed in braces is not subject to any special interpretation or
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# substitutions, except that a backslash before a brace is not counted when look#ing for the closing brace
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set somevar {
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This is a literal $ sign, and this \} escaped
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brace remains uninterpreted
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}
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# In a word enclosed in double quotes, whitespace characters lose their special
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# meaning
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set name Neo
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set greeting "Hello, $name"
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#variable names can be any string
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set {first name} New
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# The brace form of variable substitution handles more complex variable names
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set greeting "Hello, ${first name}"
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# The "set" command can always be used instead of variable substitution
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set greeting "Hello, [set {first name}]"
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# To promote the words within a word to individual words of the current
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# command, use the expansion operator, "{*}".
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set {*}{name Neo}
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# is equivalent to
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set name Neo
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# An array is a special variable that is a container for other variables.
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set person(name) Neo
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set person(gender) male
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set greeting "Hello, $person(name)"
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# A namespace holds commands and variables
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namespace eval people {
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namespace eval person1 {
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set name Neo
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}
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}
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#The full name of a variable includes its enclosing namespace(s), delimited by two colons:
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set greeting "Hello $people::person::name"
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################################################################################
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## 3. A Few Notes
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################################################################################
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# From this point on, there is no new syntax. Everything else there is to
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# learn about Tcl is about the behaviour of individual commands, and what
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# meaning they assign to their arguments.
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# All other functionality is implemented via commands. To end up with an
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# interpreter that can do nothing, delete the global namespace. It's not very
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# useful to do such a thing, but it illustrates the nature of Tcl.
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namespace delete ::
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# Because of name resolution behaviour, its safer to use the "variable" command to declare or to assign a value to a namespace.
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namespace eval people {
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namespace eval person1 {
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variable name Neo
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}
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}
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# The full name of a variable can always be used, if desired.
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set people::person1::name Neo
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################################################################################
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## 4. Commands
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################################################################################
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# Math can be done with the "expr" command.
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set a 3
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set b 4
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set c [expr {$a + $b}]
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# Since "expr" performs variable substitution on its own, brace the expression
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# to prevent Tcl from performing variable substitution first. See
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# "http://wiki.tcl.tk/Brace%20your%20#%20expr-essions" for details.
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# The "expr" command understands variable and command substitution
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set c [expr {$a + [set b]}]
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# The "expr" command provides a set of mathematical functions
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set c [expr {pow($a,$b)}]
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# Mathematical operators are available as commands in the ::tcl::mathop
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# namespace
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::tcl::mathop::+ 5 3
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# Commands can be imported from other namespaces
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namespace import ::tcl::mathop::+
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set result [+ 5 3]
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# New commands can be created via the "proc" command.
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proc greet name {
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return "Hello, $name!"
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}
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# As noted earlier, braces do not construct a code block. Every value, even
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# the third argument of the "proc" command, is a string. The previous command
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# could be defined without using braces at all:
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proc greet name return\ \"Hello,\ \$name!
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# When the last parameter is the literal value, "args", it collects all extra
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# arguments when the command is invoked
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proc fold {cmd args} {
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set res 0
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foreach arg $args {
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set res [cmd $res $arg]
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}
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}
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fold ::tcl::mathop::* 5 3 3 ;# -> 45
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# Conditional execution is implemented as a command
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if {3 > 4} {
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puts {This will never happen}
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} elseif {4 > 4} {
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puts {This will also never happen}
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} else {
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puts {This will always happen}
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}
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# Loops are implemented as commands. The first, second, and third
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# arguments of the "for" command are treated as mathematical expressions
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for {set i 0} {$i < 10} {incr i} {
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set res [expr {$res + $i}]
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}
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# The first argument of the "while" command is also treated as a mathematical
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# expression
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set i 0
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while {$i < 10} {
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incr i 2
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}
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# A list is a specially-formatted string. In the simple case, whitespace is sufficient to delimit values
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set amounts 10\ 33\ 18
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set amount [lindex $amounts 1]
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# Braces and backslash can be used to format more complex values in a list.
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# There are three items in the following
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set values {
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one\ two
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{three four}
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five\{six
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}
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# Since a list is a string, string operations could be performed on it, at the
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# risk of corrupting the list.
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set values {one two three four}
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set values [string map {two \{} $values] ;# $values is no-longer a \
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properly-formatted listwell-formed list
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# The sure-fire way to get a properly-formmated list is to use "list" commands
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set values [list one \{ three four]
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lappend values { } ;# add a single space as an item in the list
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# Use "eval" to evaluate a value as a script
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eval {
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set name Neo
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set greeting "Hello, $name"
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}
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# A list can always be passed to "eval" as a script composed of a single
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# command.
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eval {set name Neo}
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eval [list set greeting "Hello, $name"]
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# Therefore, when using "eval", use [list] to build up a desired command
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set command {set name}
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lappend command {Archibald Sorbisol}
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eval $command
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# A common mistake is not to use list functions
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set command {set name}
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append command { Archibald Sorbisol}
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eval $command ;# There is an error here, because there are too many arguments \
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to "set" in {set name Archibald Sorbisol}
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# This mistake can easily occur with the "subst" command.
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set replacement {Archibald Sorbisol}
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set command {set name $replacement}
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set command [subst $command]
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eval $command ;# The same error as before: to many arguments to "set" in \
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{set name Archibald Sorbisol}
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# The proper way is to format the substituted value using use the "list"
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# command.
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set replacement [list {Archibald Sorbisol}]
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set command {set name $replacement}
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set command [subst $command]
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eval $command
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# It is extremely common to see the "list" command being used to properly
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# format values that are substituted into Tcl script templates. There is an
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# example of this in the following replacement "while" implementation.
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#get rid of the built-in "while" command.
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rename ::while {}
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# Define a new while command with the "proc" command. More sophisticated error
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# handling is left as an exercise.
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proc while {condition script} {
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if {[uplevel 1 [list expr $condition]]} {
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uplevel 1 $script
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tailcall [namespace which while] $condition $script
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}
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}
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```
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