| '\" |
| '\" Copyright (c) 1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. |
| '\" |
| '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution |
| '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. |
| '\" |
| '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: ParseCmd.3,v 1.10 2002/08/05 03:24:39 dgp Exp $ |
| '\" |
| '\" The definitions below are for supplemental macros used in Tcl/Tk |
| '\" manual entries. |
| '\" |
| '\" .AP type name in/out ?indent? |
| '\" Start paragraph describing an argument to a library procedure. |
| '\" type is type of argument (int, etc.), in/out is either "in", "out", |
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| '\" needed; use .AS below instead) |
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| '\" .AS ?type? ?name? |
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| '\" name are examples of largest possible arguments that will be passed |
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| '\" .CS |
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| '\" |
| '\" .VS ?version? ?br? |
| '\" Begin vertical sidebar, for use in marking newly-changed parts |
| '\" of man pages. The first argument is ignored and used for recording |
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| '\" |
| '\" .OP cmdName dbName dbClass |
| '\" Start of description of a specific option. cmdName gives the |
| '\" option's name as specified in the class command, dbName gives |
| '\" the option's name in the option database, and dbClass gives |
| '\" the option's class in the option database. |
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| '\" .UL arg1 arg2 |
| '\" Print arg1 underlined, then print arg2 normally. |
| '\" |
| '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: man.macros,v 1.4 2000/08/25 06:18:32 ericm Exp $ |
| '\" |
| '\" # Set up traps and other miscellaneous stuff for Tcl/Tk man pages. |
| .if t .wh -1.3i ^B |
| .nr ^l \n(.l |
| .ad b |
| '\" # Start an argument description |
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| .ie !"\\$4"" .TP \\$4 |
| .el \{\ |
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| .el \h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\h'\\n(^lu+3n'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\h'|0u'\c |
| .\} |
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| \kx\h'-\\nxu'\h'|\\n(^lu+3n'\ky\L'-\\n(^xu'\v'\\n(^xu'\h'|0u'\c |
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| '\" # SO - start of list of standard options |
| .de SO |
| .SH "STANDARD OPTIONS" |
| .LP |
| .nf |
| .ta 5.5c 11c |
| .ft B |
| .. |
| '\" # SE - end of list of standard options |
| .de SE |
| .fi |
| .ft R |
| .LP |
| See the \\fBoptions\\fR manual entry for details on the standard options. |
| .. |
| '\" # OP - start of full description for a single option |
| .de OP |
| .LP |
| .nf |
| .ta 4c |
| Command-Line Name: \\fB\\$1\\fR |
| Database Name: \\fB\\$2\\fR |
| Database Class: \\fB\\$3\\fR |
| .fi |
| .IP |
| .. |
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| \\$1\l'|0\(ul'\\$2 |
| .. |
| .TH Tcl_ParseCommand 3 8.3 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" |
| .BS |
| .SH NAME |
| Tcl_ParseCommand, Tcl_ParseExpr, Tcl_ParseBraces, Tcl_ParseQuotedString, Tcl_ParseVarName, Tcl_ParseVar, Tcl_FreeParse, Tcl_EvalTokens, Tcl_EvalTokensStandard \- parse Tcl scripts and expressions |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .nf |
| \fB#include <tcl.h>\fR |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR(\fIinterp, string, numBytes, nested, parsePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR(\fIinterp, string, numBytes, parsePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR(\fIinterp, string, numBytes, parsePtr, append, termPtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR(\fIinterp, string, numBytes, parsePtr, append, termPtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR(\fIinterp, string, numBytes, parsePtr, append\fR) |
| .sp |
| CONST char * |
| \fBTcl_ParseVar\fR(\fIinterp, string, termPtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| \fBTcl_FreeParse\fR(\fIusedParsePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| Tcl_Obj * |
| \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR(\fIinterp, tokenPtr, numTokens\fR) |
| .sp |
| Tcl_Obj * |
| \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR(\fIinterp, tokenPtr, numTokens\fR) |
| .SH ARGUMENTS |
| .AS Tcl_Interp *usedParsePtr |
| .AP Tcl_Interp *interp out |
| For procedures other than \fBTcl_FreeParse\fR, \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR |
| and \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR, used only for error reporting; |
| if NULL, then no error messages are left after errors. |
| For \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR and \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR, |
| determines the context for evaluating the |
| script and also is used for error reporting; must not be NULL. |
| .AP "CONST char" *string in |
| Pointer to first character in string to parse. |
| .AP int numBytes in |
| Number of bytes in \fIstring\fR, not including any terminating null |
| character. If less than 0 then the script consists of all characters |
| in \fIstring\fR up to the first null character. |
| .AP int nested in |
| Non-zero means that the script is part of a command substitution so an |
| unquoted close bracket should be treated as a command terminator. If zero, |
| close brackets have no special meaning. |
| .AP int append in |
| Non-zero means that \fI*parsePtr\fR already contains valid tokens; the new |
| tokens should be appended to those already present. Zero means that |
| \fI*parsePtr\fR is uninitialized; any information in it is ignored. |
| This argument is normally 0. |
| .AP Tcl_Parse *parsePtr out |
| Points to structure to fill in with information about the parsed |
| command, expression, variable name, etc. |
| Any previous information in this structure |
| is ignored, unless \fIappend\fR is non-zero in a call to |
| \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, |
| or \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR. |
| .AP "CONST char" **termPtr out |
| If not NULL, points to a location where |
| \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and |
| \fBTcl_ParseVar\fR will store a pointer to the character |
| just after the terminating character (the close-brace, the last |
| character of the variable name, or the close-quote (respectively)) |
| if the parse was successful. |
| .AP Tcl_Parse *usedParsePtr in |
| Points to structure that was filled in by a previous call to |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR, etc. |
| .BE |
| |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .PP |
| These procedures parse Tcl commands or portions of Tcl commands such as |
| expressions or references to variables. |
| Each procedure takes a pointer to a script (or portion thereof) |
| and fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR |
| with a collection of tokens describing the information that was parsed. |
| The procedures normally return \fBTCL_OK\fR. |
| However, if an error occurs then they return \fBTCL_ERROR\fR, |
| leave an error message in \fIinterp's\fR result |
| (if \fIinterp\fR is not NULL), |
| and leave nothing in \fIparsePtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR is a procedure that parses Tcl |
| scripts. Given a pointer to a script, it |
| parses the first command from the script. If the command was parsed |
| successfully, \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR and fills in the |
| structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR with information about the |
| structure of the command (see below for details). |
| If an error occurred in parsing the command then |
| \fBTCL_ERROR\fR is returned, an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's |
| result, and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR parses Tcl expressions. |
| Given a pointer to a script containing an expression, |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR parses the expression. |
| If the expression was parsed successfully, |
| \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR and fills in the |
| structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR with information about the |
| structure of the expression (see below for details). |
| If an error occurred in parsing the command then |
| \fBTCL_ERROR\fR is returned, an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's |
| result, and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR parses a string or command argument |
| enclosed in braces such as |
| \fB{hello}\fR or \fB{string \\t with \\t tabs}\fR |
| from the beginning of its argument \fIstring\fR. |
| The first character of \fIstring\fR must be \fB{\fR. |
| If the braced string was parsed successfully, |
| \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR, |
| fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR |
| with information about the structure of the string |
| (see below for details), |
| and stores a pointer to the character just after the terminating \fB}\fR |
| in the location given by \fI*termPtr\fR. |
| If an error occurs while parsing the string |
| then \fBTCL_ERROR\fR is returned, |
| an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's result, |
| and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR or \fI*termPtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR parses a double-quoted string such as |
| \fB"sum is [expr $a+$b]"\fR |
| from the beginning of the argument \fIstring\fR. |
| The first character of \fIstring\fR must be \fB"\fR. |
| If the double-quoted string was parsed successfully, |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR, |
| fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR |
| with information about the structure of the string |
| (see below for details), |
| and stores a pointer to the character just after the terminating \fB"\fR |
| in the location given by \fI*termPtr\fR. |
| If an error occurs while parsing the string |
| then \fBTCL_ERROR\fR is returned, |
| an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's result, |
| and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR or \fI*termPtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR parses a Tcl variable reference such as |
| \fB$abc\fR or \fB$x([expr $index + 1])\fR from the beginning of its |
| \fIstring\fR argument. |
| The first character of \fIstring\fR must be \fB$\fR. |
| If a variable name was parsed successfully, \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR |
| returns \fBTCL_OK\fR and fills in the structure pointed to by |
| \fIparsePtr\fR with information about the structure of the variable name |
| (see below for details). If an error |
| occurs while parsing the command then \fBTCL_ERROR\fR is returned, an |
| error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's result (if \fIinterp\fR isn't |
| NULL), and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseVar\fR parse a Tcl variable reference such as \fB$abc\fR |
| or \fB$x([expr $index + 1])\fR from the beginning of its \fIstring\fR |
| argument. The first character of \fIstring\fR must be \fB$\fR. If |
| the variable name is parsed successfully, \fBTcl_ParseVar\fR returns a |
| pointer to the string value of the variable. If an error occurs while |
| parsing, then NULL is returned and an error message is left in |
| \fIinterp\fR's result. |
| .PP |
| The information left at \fI*parsePtr\fR |
| by \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR |
| may include dynamically allocated memory. |
| If these five parsing procedures return \fBTCL_OK\fR |
| then the caller must invoke \fBTcl_FreeParse\fR to release |
| the storage at \fI*parsePtr\fR. |
| These procedures ignore any existing information in |
| \fI*parsePtr\fR (unless \fIappend\fR is non-zero), |
| so if repeated calls are being made to any of them |
| then \fBTcl_FreeParse\fR must be invoked once after each call. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR evaluates a sequence of parse tokens from |
| a Tcl_Parse structure. The tokens typically consist |
| of all the tokens in a word or all the tokens that make up the index for |
| a reference to an array variable. \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR performs the |
| substitutions requested by the tokens and concatenates the |
| resulting values. |
| The return value from \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR is a Tcl completion |
| code with one of the values \fBTCL_OK\fR, \fBTCL_ERROR\fR, |
| \fBTCL_RETURN\fR, \fBTCL_BREAK\fR, or \fBTCL_CONTINUE\fR. |
| In addition, a result value or error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's |
| result; it can be retrieved using \fBTcl_GetObjResult\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR differs from \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR only in |
| the return convention used: it returns the result in a new Tcl_Obj. |
| The reference count of the object returned as result has been |
| incremented, so the caller must |
| invoke \fBTcl_DecrRefCount\fR when it is finished with the object. |
| If an error or other exception occurs while evaluating the tokens |
| (such as a reference to a non-existent variable) then the return value |
| is NULL and an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's result. The use |
| of \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR is deprecated. |
| |
| .SH "TCL_PARSE STRUCTURE" |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR |
| return parse information in two data structures, Tcl_Parse and Tcl_Token: |
| .CS |
| typedef struct Tcl_Parse { |
| char *\fIcommentStart\fR; |
| int \fIcommentSize\fR; |
| char *\fIcommandStart\fR; |
| int \fIcommandSize\fR; |
| int \fInumWords\fR; |
| Tcl_Token *\fItokenPtr\fR; |
| int \fInumTokens\fR; |
| ... |
| } Tcl_Parse; |
| |
| typedef struct Tcl_Token { |
| int \fItype\fR; |
| char *\fIstart\fR; |
| int \fIsize\fR; |
| int \fInumComponents\fR; |
| } Tcl_Token; |
| .CE |
| .PP |
| The first five fields of a Tcl_Parse structure |
| are filled in only by \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR. |
| These fields are not used by the other parsing procedures. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR fills in a Tcl_Parse structure |
| with information that describes one Tcl command and any comments that |
| precede the command. |
| If there are comments, |
| the \fIcommentStart\fR field points to the \fB#\fR character that begins |
| the first comment and \fIcommentSize\fR indicates the number of bytes |
| in all of the comments preceding the command, including the newline |
| character that terminates the last comment. |
| If the command is not preceded by any comments, \fIcommentSize\fR is 0. |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR also sets the \fIcommandStart\fR field |
| to point to the first character of the first |
| word in the command (skipping any comments and leading space) and |
| \fIcommandSize\fR gives the total number of bytes in the command, |
| including the character pointed to by \fIcommandStart\fR up to and |
| including the newline, close bracket, or semicolon character that |
| terminates the command. The \fInumWords\fR field gives the |
| total number of words in the command. |
| .PP |
| All parsing procedures set the remaining fields, |
| \fItokenPtr\fR and \fInumTokens\fR. |
| The \fItokenPtr\fR field points to the first in an array of Tcl_Token |
| structures that describe the components of the entity being parsed. |
| The \fInumTokens\fR field gives the total number of tokens |
| present in the array. |
| Each token contains four fields. |
| The \fItype\fR field selects one of several token types |
| that are described below. The \fIstart\fR field |
| points to the first character in the token and the \fIsize\fR field |
| gives the total number of characters in the token. Some token types, |
| such as \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR and \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR, consist of |
| several component tokens, which immediately follow the parent token; |
| the \fInumComponents\fR field describes how many of these there are. |
| The \fItype\fR field has one of the following values: |
| .TP 20 |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR |
| This token ordinarily describes one word of a command |
| but it may also describe a quoted or braced string in an expression. |
| The token describes a component of the script that is |
| the result of concatenating together a sequence of subcomponents, |
| each described by a separate subtoken. |
| The token starts with the first non-blank |
| character of the component (which may be a double-quote or open brace) |
| and includes all characters in the component up to but not including the |
| space, semicolon, close bracket, close quote, or close brace that |
| terminates the component. The \fInumComponents\fR field counts the total |
| number of sub-tokens that make up the word, including sub-tokens |
| of \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR and \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR tokens. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR |
| This token has the same meaning as \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR, except that |
| the word is guaranteed to consist of a single \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR |
| sub-token. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 1. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR |
| The token describes a range of literal text that is part of a word. |
| The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR |
| The token describes a backslash sequence such as \fB\en\fR or \fB\e0xa3\fR. |
| The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR |
| The token describes a command whose result result must be substituted into |
| the word. The token includes the square brackets that surround the |
| command. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0 (the nested command |
| is not parsed; call \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR recursively if you want to |
| see its tokens). |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR |
| The token describes a variable substitution, including the |
| \fB$\fR, variable name, and array index (if there is one) up through the |
| close parenthesis that terminates the index. This token is followed |
| by one or more additional tokens that describe the variable name and |
| array index. If \fInumComponents\fR is 1 then the variable is a |
| scalar and the next token is a \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR token that gives the |
| variable name. If \fInumComponents\fR is greater than 1 then the |
| variable is an array: the first sub-token is a \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR |
| token giving the array name and the remaining sub-tokens are |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR, and |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR tokens that must be concatenated to produce the |
| array index. The \fInumComponents\fR field includes nested sub-tokens |
| that are part of \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR tokens in the array index. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR |
| The token describes one subexpression of an expression |
| (or an entire expression). |
| A subexpression may consist of a value |
| such as an integer literal, variable substitution, |
| or parenthesized subexpression; |
| it may also consist of an operator and its operands. |
| The token starts with the first non-blank character of the subexpression |
| up to but not including the space, brace, close-paren, or bracket |
| that terminates the subexpression. |
| This token is followed by one or more additional tokens |
| that describe the subexpression. |
| If the first sub-token after the \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token |
| is a \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token, |
| the subexpression consists of an operator and its token operands. |
| If the operator has no operands, the subexpression consists of |
| just the \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token. |
| Each operand is described by a \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token. |
| Otherwise, the subexpression is a value described by |
| one of the token types \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR, |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR, |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR, and \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR. |
| The \fInumComponents\fR field |
| counts the total number of sub-tokens that make up the subexpression; |
| this includes the sub-tokens for any nested \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR |
| The token describes one operator of an expression |
| such as \fB&&\fR or \fBhypot\fR. |
| An \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token is always preceded by a |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token |
| that describes the operator and its operands; |
| the \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token's \fInumComponents\fR field |
| can be used to determine the number of operands. |
| A binary operator such as \fB*\fR |
| is followed by two \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens |
| that describe its operands. |
| A unary operator like \fB-\fR |
| is followed by a single \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token |
| for its operand. |
| If the operator is a math function such as \fBlog10\fR, |
| the \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token will give its name and |
| the following \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens will describe |
| its operands; |
| if there are no operands (as with \fBrand\fR), |
| no \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens follow. |
| There is one trinary operator, \fB?\fR, |
| that appears in if-then-else subexpressions |
| such as \fIx\fB?\fIy\fB:\fIz\fR; |
| in this case, the \fB?\fR \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token |
| is followed by three \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens for the operands |
| \fIx\fR, \fIy\fR, and \fIz\fR. |
| The \fInumComponents\fR field for a \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token |
| is always 0. |
| .PP |
| After \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR returns, the first token pointed to by |
| the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the |
| Tcl_Parse structure always has type \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR or |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR. It is followed by the sub-tokens |
| that must be concatenated to produce the value of that word. |
| The next token is the \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR or \fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR |
| token for the second word, followed by sub-tokens for that |
| word, and so on until all \fInumWords\fR have been accounted |
| for. |
| .PP |
| After \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR returns, the first token pointed to by |
| the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the |
| Tcl_Parse structure always has type \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR. |
| It is followed by the sub-tokens that must be evaluated |
| to produce the value of the expression. |
| Only the token information in the Tcl_Parse structure |
| is modified: the \fIcommentStart\fR, \fIcommentSize\fR, |
| \fIcommandStart\fR, and \fIcommandSize\fR fields are not modified |
| by \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR. |
| .PP |
| After \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR returns, |
| the array of tokens pointed to by the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the |
| Tcl_Parse structure will contain a single \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR token |
| if the braced string does not contain any backslash-newlines. |
| If the string does contain backslash-newlines, |
| the array of tokens will contain one or more |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR or \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR sub-tokens |
| that must be concatenated to produce the value of the string. |
| If the braced string was just \fB{}\fR |
| (that is, the string was empty), |
| the single \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR token will have a \fIsize\fR field |
| containing zero; |
| this ensures that at least one token appears |
| to describe the braced string. |
| Only the token information in the Tcl_Parse structure |
| is modified: the \fIcommentStart\fR, \fIcommentSize\fR, |
| \fIcommandStart\fR, and \fIcommandSize\fR fields are not modified |
| by \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR. |
| .PP |
| After \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR returns, |
| the array of tokens pointed to by the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the |
| Tcl_Parse structure depends on the contents of the quoted string. |
| It will consist of one or more \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR, |
| \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR, and \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR sub-tokens. |
| The array always contains at least one token; |
| for example, if the argument \fIstring\fR is empty, |
| the array returned consists of a single \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR token |
| with a zero \fIsize\fR field. |
| Only the token information in the Tcl_Parse structure |
| is modified: the \fIcommentStart\fR, \fIcommentSize\fR, |
| \fIcommandStart\fR, and \fIcommandSize\fR fields are not modified. |
| .PP |
| After \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR returns, the first token pointed to by |
| the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the |
| Tcl_Parse structure always has type \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR. It |
| is followed by the sub-tokens that make up the variable name as |
| described above. The total length of the variable name is |
| contained in the \fIsize\fR field of the first token. |
| As in \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, |
| only the token information in the Tcl_Parse structure |
| is modified by \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR: |
| the \fIcommentStart\fR, \fIcommentSize\fR, |
| \fIcommandStart\fR, and \fIcommandSize\fR fields are not modified. |
| .PP |
| All of the character pointers in the |
| Tcl_Parse and Tcl_Token structures refer |
| to characters in the \fIstring\fR argument passed to |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR. |
| .PP |
| There are additional fields in the Tcl_Parse structure after the |
| \fInumTokens\fR field, but these are for the private use of |
| \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, |
| \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR; they should not be |
| referenced by code outside of these procedures. |
| |
| .SH KEYWORDS |
| backslash substitution, braces, command, expression, parse, token, variable substitution |