Provided by: tcl8.4-doc_8.4.20-8_all bug

NAME

       Tcl_CreateMathFunc,  Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo,  Tcl_ListMathFuncs - Define, query and enumerate
       math functions for expressions

SYNOPSIS

       #include <tcl.h>

       void
       Tcl_CreateMathFunc(interp, name, numArgs, argTypes, proc, clientData)

       int                                                                                        │
       Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo(interp, name, numArgsPtr, argTypesPtr, procPtr, clientDataPtr)         │

       Tcl_Obj *                                                                                  │
       Tcl_ListMathFuncs(interp, pattern)                                                         │

ARGUMENTS

       Tcl_Interp      *interp          (in)      Interpreter  in  which  new  function  will  be
                                                  defined.                                        │

       CONST char      *name            (in)                                                      │
                                                  Name for new function.

       int             numArgs          (in)      Number  of  arguments  to  new  function;  also
                                                  gives size of argTypes array.

       Tcl_ValueType   *argTypes        (in)      Points to an array giving the permissible types
                                                  for each argument to function.

       Tcl_MathProc    *proc            (in)      Procedure that implements the function.

       ClientData      clientData       (in)      Arbitrary  one-word  value to pass to proc when
                                                  it is invoked.

       int             *numArgsPtr      (out)     Points to  a  variable  that  will  be  set  to
                                                  contain   the   number   of  arguments  to  the
                                                  function.

       Tcl_ValueType   **argTypesPtr    (out)     Points to  a  variable  that  will  be  set  to
                                                  contain  a  pointer  to  an  array  giving  the
                                                  permissible types  for  each  argument  to  the
                                                  function  which  will need to be freed up using
                                                  Tcl_Free.

       Tcl_MathProc    **procPtr        (out)     Points to  a  variable  that  will  be  set  to
                                                  contain  a  pointer  to the implementation code
                                                  for the function (or NULL if  the  function  is
                                                  implemented directly in bytecode.)

       ClientData      *clientDataPtr   (out)     Points  to  a  variable  that  will  be  set to
                                                  contain  the  clientData  argument  passed   to
                                                  Tcl_CreateMathFunc   when   the   function  was
                                                  created if  the  function  is  not  implemented
                                                  directly in bytecode.

       CONST char      *pattern         (in)      Pattern  to  match against function names so as
                                                  to filter them (by passing to Tcl_StringMatch),
                                                  or NULL to not apply any filter.
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       Tcl allows a number of mathematical functions to be used in expressions, such as sin, cos,
       and hypot.  Tcl_CreateMathFunc allows applications to add additional  functions  to  those
       already  provided  by  Tcl  or  to  replace  existing  functions.  Name is the name of the
       function as it will appear in expressions.  If name doesn't already exist  as  a  function
       then a new function is created.  If it does exist, then the existing function is replaced.
       NumArgs and argTypes describe the arguments to the function.  Each entry in  the  argTypes
       array  must be one of TCL_INT, TCL_DOUBLE, TCL_WIDE_INT, or TCL_EITHER to indicate whether │
       the corresponding argument must be an integer, a double-precision floating value,  a  wide │
       (64-bit) integer, or any, respectively.

       Whenever  the function is invoked in an expression Tcl will invoke proc.  Proc should have
       arguments and result that match the type Tcl_MathProc:
              typedef int Tcl_MathProc(
                ClientData clientData,
                Tcl_Interp *interp,
                Tcl_Value *args,
                Tcl_Value *resultPtr);

       When proc is invoked the clientData and interp arguments will be the same as those  passed
       to Tcl_CreateMathFunc.  Args will point to an array of numArgs Tcl_Value structures, which
       describe the actual arguments to the function:                                             │
              typedef struct Tcl_Value {                                                          │
                Tcl_ValueType type;                                                               │
                long intValue;                                                                    │
                double doubleValue;                                                               │
                Tcl_WideInt wideValue;                                                            │
              } Tcl_Value;                                                                        │

       The type field indicates the type of the argument and is one  of  TCL_INT,  TCL_DOUBLE  or │
       TCL_WIDE_INT.   It  will  match  the  argTypes value specified for the function unless the
       argTypes value was TCL_EITHER. Tcl converts the argument supplied in the expression to the
       type  requested  in  argTypes,  if  that is necessary.  Depending on the value of the type
       field, the intValue, doubleValue or wideValue field will contain the actual value  of  the │
       argument.

       Proc should compute its result and store it either as an integer in resultPtr->intValue or
       as a floating value in resultPtr->doubleValue.  It should set also resultPtr->type to  one
       of  TCL_INT,  TCL_DOUBLE  or  TCL_WIDE_INT  to indicate which value was set.  Under normal │
       circumstances proc should return TCL_OK.  If an error occurs while executing the function,
       proc should return TCL_ERROR and leave an error message in the interpreter's result.

       Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo retrieves the values associated with function name that were passed to │
       a preceding Tcl_CreateMathFunc call.  Normally, the return code is TCL_OK but if the named │
       function  does  not  exist,  TCL_ERROR  is  returned and an error message is placed in the │
       interpreter's result.                                                                      │

       If an error did not occur, the array reference  placed  in  the  variable  pointed  to  by │
       argTypesPtr  is  newly  allocated, and should be released by passing it to Tcl_Free.  Some │
       functions (the standard set implemented in the  core)  are  implemented  directly  at  the │
       bytecode  level;  attempting to retrieve values for them causes a NULL to be stored in the │
       variable pointed to by procPtr and the variable pointed to by clientDataPtr  will  not  be │
       modified.                                                                                  │

       Tcl_ListMathFuncs returns a Tcl object containing a list of all the math functions defined │
       in the interpreter whose name matches pattern.  In the case of an error, NULL is  returned │
       and  an error message is left in the interpreter result, and otherwise the returned object │
       will have a reference count of zero.

KEYWORDS

       expression, mathematical function

SEE ALSO

       expr(3tcl), info(3tcl), Tcl_Free(3tcl), Tcl_NewListObj(3tcl)