bionic (3) switch.3tcl.gz

Provided by: tcl8.5-doc_8.5.19-4_all bug

NAME

       switch - Evaluate one of several scripts, depending on a given value

SYNOPSIS

       switch ?options? string pattern body ?pattern body ...?

       switch ?options? string {pattern body ?pattern body ...?}
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  switch  command matches its string argument against each of the pattern arguments in order.  As soon
       as it finds a pattern that matches string  it  evaluates  the  following  body  argument  by  passing  it
       recursively  to  the  Tcl  interpreter  and  returns  the result of that evaluation.  If the last pattern
       argument is default then it matches anything.  If no pattern argument matches string and  no  default  is
       given, then the switch command returns an empty string.

       If the initial arguments to switch start with - then they are treated as options unless there are exactly │
       two arguments to switch (in which case the first must the string and the second must be the  pattern/body │
       list).  The following options are currently supported:

       -exact    Use exact matching when comparing string to a pattern.  This is the default.

       -glob     When  matching string to the patterns, use glob-style matching (i.e. the same as implemented by
                 the string match command).

       -regexp   When matching string to the patterns, use regular expression  matching  (as  described  in  the
                 re_syntax reference page).                                                                      │

       -nocase                                                                                                   │
                 Causes comparisons to be handled in a case-insensitive manner.                                  │

       -matchvar varName                                                                                         │
                 This  option  (only legal when -regexp is also specified) specifies the name of a variable into │
                 which the list of matches found by the regular expression engine will be  written.   The  first │
                 element  of the list written will be the overall substring of the input string (i.e. the string │
                 argument to switch) matched, the second element of the list will be the  substring  matched  by │
                 the  first  capturing  parenthesis  in  the regular expression that matched, and so on.  When a │
                 default branch is taken, the variable will have the empty list written to it.  This option  may │
                 be specified at the same time as the -indexvar option.                                          │

       -indexvar varName                                                                                         │
                 This  option  (only legal when -regexp is also specified) specifies the name of a variable into │
                 which the list of indices referring to matching substrings  found  by  the  regular  expression │
                 engine  will  be  written.   The  first  element of the list written will be a two-element list │
                 specifying the index of the start and index of the first character after the end of the overall │
                 substring of the input string (i.e. the string argument to switch) matched, in a similar way to │
                 the -indices option to the regexp can obtain.  Similarly, the second element of the list refers │
                 to  the  first capturing parenthesis in the regular expression that matched, and so on.  When a │
                 default branch is taken, the variable will have the empty list written to it.  This option  may │
                 be specified at the same time as the -matchvar option.

       --        Marks the end of options.  The argument following this one will be treated as string even if it
                 starts with a -.  This is not required when  the  matching  patterns  and  bodies  are  grouped │
                 together in a single argument.

       Two  syntaxes  are  provided  for the pattern and body arguments.  The first uses a separate argument for
       each of the patterns and commands; this form is convenient if substitutions are desired on  some  of  the
       patterns  or  commands.   The  second form places all of the patterns and commands together into a single
       argument; the argument must have proper list structure, with the elements of the list being the  patterns
       and  commands.   The  second form makes it easy to construct multi-line switch commands, since the braces
       around the whole list make it unnecessary to include a backslash at the end  of  each  line.   Since  the
       pattern arguments are in braces in the second form, no command or variable substitutions are performed on
       them;  this makes the behavior of the second form different than the first form in some cases.

       If a body is specified as “-” it means that the body for the next pattern should also be used as the body
       for  this  pattern  (if  the next pattern also has a body of “-” then the body after that is used, and so
       on).  This feature makes it possible to share a single body among several patterns.

       Beware of how you place comments in switch commands.  Comments should only be placed inside the execution
       body of one of the patterns, and not intermingled with the patterns.

EXAMPLES

       The switch command can match against variables and not just literals, as shown here (the result is 2):
              set foo "abc"
              switch abc a - b {expr {1}} $foo {expr {2}} default {expr {3}}

       Using  glob  matching  and  the  fall-through  body is an alternative to writing regular expressions with
       alternations, as can be seen here (this returns 1):
              switch -glob aaab {
                 a*b     -
                 b       {expr {1}}
                 a*      {expr {2}}
                 default {expr {3}}
              }

       Whenever nothing matches, the default clause (which must be last) is taken.  This example has a result of
       3:
              switch xyz {
                 a -
                 b {
                    # Correct Comment Placement
                    expr {1}
                 }
                 c {
                    expr {2}
                 }
                 default {
                    expr {3}
                 }
              }

       When  matching  against  regular  expressions,  information about what exactly matched is easily obtained │
       using the -matchvar option:                                                                               │
              switch -regexp -matchvar foo -- $bar {                                                             │
                 a(b*)c {                                                                                        │
                    puts "Found [string length [lindex $foo 1]] 'b's"                                            │
                 }                                                                                               │
                 d(e*)f(g*)h {                                                                                   │
                    puts "Found [string length [lindex $foo 1]] 'e's and\                                        │
                          [string length [lindex $foo 2]] 'g's"                                                  │
                 }                                                                                               │
              }                                                                                                  │

SEE ALSO

       for(3tcl), if(3tcl), regexp(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       switch, match, regular expression