Provided by: tcl8.6-doc_8.6.12+dfsg-1build1_all 

NAME
dict - Manipulate dictionaries
SYNOPSIS
dict option arg ?arg ...?
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DESCRIPTION
Performs one of several operations on dictionary values or variables containing dictionary values (see
the DICTIONARY VALUES section below for a description), depending on option. The legal options (which
may be abbreviated) are:
dict append dictionaryVariable key ?string ...?
This appends the given string (or strings) to the value that the given key maps to in the
dictionary value contained in the given variable, writing the resulting dictionary value back to
that variable. Non-existent keys are treated as if they map to an empty string. The updated
dictionary value is returned.
dict create ?key value ...?
Return a new dictionary that contains each of the key/value mappings listed as arguments (keys and
values alternating, with each key being followed by its associated value.)
dict exists dictionaryValue key ?key ...?
This returns a boolean value indicating whether the given key (or path of keys through a set of
nested dictionaries) exists in the given dictionary value. This returns a true value exactly when
dict get on that path will succeed.
dict filter dictionaryValue filterType arg ?arg ...?
This takes a dictionary value and returns a new dictionary that contains just those key/value
pairs that match the specified filter type (which may be abbreviated.) Supported filter types
are:
dict filter dictionaryValue key ?globPattern ...?
The key rule only matches those key/value pairs whose keys match any of the given patterns 2
(in the style of string match.)
dict filter dictionaryValue script {keyVariable valueVariable} script
The script rule tests for matching by assigning the key to the keyVariable and the value to
the valueVariable, and then evaluating the given script which should result in a boolean
value (with the key/value pair only being included in the result of the dict filter when a
true value is returned.) Note that the first argument after the rule selection word is a
two-element list. If the script returns with a condition of TCL_BREAK, no further
key/value pairs are considered for inclusion in the resulting dictionary, and a condition
of TCL_CONTINUE is equivalent to a false result. The key/value pairs are tested in the
order in which the keys were inserted into the dictionary.
dict filter dictionaryValue value ?globPattern ...?
The value rule only matches those key/value pairs whose values match any of the given 2
patterns (in the style of string match.)
dict for {keyVariable valueVariable} dictionaryValue body
This command takes three arguments, the first a two-element list of variable names (for the key
and value respectively of each mapping in the dictionary), the second the dictionary value to
iterate across, and the third a script to be evaluated for each mapping with the key and value
variables set appropriately (in the manner of foreach.) The result of the command is an empty
string. If any evaluation of the body generates a TCL_BREAK result, no further pairs from the
dictionary will be iterated over and the dict for command will terminate successfully immediately.
If any evaluation of the body generates a TCL_CONTINUE result, this shall be treated exactly like
a normal TCL_OK result. The order of iteration is the order in which the keys were inserted into
the dictionary.
dict get dictionaryValue ?key ...?
Given a dictionary value (first argument) and a key (second argument), this will retrieve the
value for that key. Where several keys are supplied, the behaviour of the command shall be as if
the result of dict get $dictVal $key was passed as the first argument to dict get with the
remaining arguments as second (and possibly subsequent) arguments. This facilitates lookups in
nested dictionaries. For example, the following two commands are equivalent:
dict get $dict foo bar spong
dict get [dict get [dict get $dict foo] bar] spong
If no keys are provided, dict get will return a list containing pairs of elements in a manner
similar to array get. That is, the first element of each pair would be the key and the second
element would be the value for that key.
It is an error to attempt to retrieve a value for a key that is not present in the dictionary.
dict incr dictionaryVariable key ?increment?
This adds the given increment value (an integer that defaults to 1 if not specified) to the value
that the given key maps to in the dictionary value contained in the given variable, writing the
resulting dictionary value back to that variable. Non-existent keys are treated as if they map to
0. It is an error to increment a value for an existing key if that value is not an integer. The
updated dictionary value is returned.
dict info dictionaryValue
This returns information (intended for display to people) about the given dictionary though the
format of this data is dependent on the implementation of the dictionary. For dictionaries that
are implemented by hash tables, it is expected that this will return the string produced by
Tcl_HashStats, similar to array statistics.
dict keys dictionaryValue ?globPattern?
Return a list of all keys in the given dictionary value. If a pattern is supplied, only those keys
that match it (according to the rules of string match) will be returned. The returned keys will be
in the order that they were inserted into the dictionary.
dict lappend dictionaryVariable key ?value ...?
This appends the given items to the list value that the given key maps to in the dictionary value
contained in the given variable, writing the resulting dictionary value back to that variable.
Non-existent keys are treated as if they map to an empty list, and it is legal for there to be no
items to append to the list. It is an error for the value that the key maps to to not be
representable as a list. The updated dictionary value is returned.
dict map {keyVariable valueVariable} dictionaryValue body
This command applies a transformation to each element of a dictionary, returning a new dictionary.
It takes three arguments: the first is a two-element list of variable names (for the key and value
respectively of each mapping in the dictionary), the second the dictionary value to iterate
across, and the third a script to be evaluated for each mapping with the key and value variables
set appropriately (in the manner of lmap). In an iteration where the evaluated script completes
normally (TCL_OK, as opposed to an error, etc.) the result of the script is put into an
accumulator dictionary using the key that is the current contents of the keyVariable variable at
that point. The result of the dict map command is the accumulator dictionary after all keys have
been iterated over.
If the evaluation of the body for any particular step generates a break, no further pairs from the
dictionary will be iterated over and the dict map command will terminate successfully immediately.
If the evaluation of the body for a particular step generates a continue result, the current
iteration is aborted and the accumulator dictionary is not modified. The order of iteration is the
natural order of the dictionary (typically the order in which the keys were added to the
dictionary; the order is the same as that used in dict for).
dict merge ?dictionaryValue ...?
Return a dictionary that contains the contents of each of the dictionaryValue arguments. Where
two (or more) dictionaries contain a mapping for the same key, the resulting dictionary maps that
key to the value according to the last dictionary on the command line containing a mapping for
that key.
dict remove dictionaryValue ?key ...?
Return a new dictionary that is a copy of an old one passed in as first argument except without
mappings for each of the keys listed. It is legal for there to be no keys to remove, and it also
legal for any of the keys to be removed to not be present in the input dictionary in the first
place.
dict replace dictionaryValue ?key value ...?
Return a new dictionary that is a copy of an old one passed in as first argument except with some
values different or some extra key/value pairs added. It is legal for this command to be called
with no key/value pairs, but illegal for this command to be called with a key but no value.
dict set dictionaryVariable key ?key ...? value
This operation takes the name of a variable containing a dictionary value and places an updated
dictionary value in that variable containing a mapping from the given key to the given value. When
multiple keys are present, this operation creates or updates a chain of nested dictionaries. The
updated dictionary value is returned.
dict size dictionaryValue
Return the number of key/value mappings in the given dictionary value.
dict unset dictionaryVariable key ?key ...?
This operation (the companion to dict set) takes the name of a variable containing a dictionary
value and places an updated dictionary value in that variable that does not contain a mapping for
the given key. Where multiple keys are present, this describes a path through nested dictionaries
to the mapping to remove. At least one key must be specified, but the last key on the key-path
need not exist. All other components on the path must exist. The updated dictionary value is
returned.
dict update dictionaryVariable key varName ?key varName ...? body
Execute the Tcl script in body with the value for each key (as found by reading the dictionary
value in dictionaryVariable) mapped to the variable varName. There may be multiple key/varName
pairs. If a key does not have a mapping, that corresponds to an unset varName. When body
terminates, any changes made to the varNames is reflected back to the dictionary within
dictionaryVariable (unless dictionaryVariable itself becomes unreadable, when all updates are
silently discarded), even if the result of body is an error or some other kind of exceptional
exit. The result of dict update is (unless some kind of error occurs) the result of the evaluation
of body.
Each varName is mapped in the scope enclosing the dict update; it is recommended that this command
only be used in a local scope (procedure, lambda term for apply, or method). Because of this, the
variables set by dict update will continue to exist after the command finishes (unless explicitly
unset). Note that the mapping of values to variables does not use traces; changes to the
dictionaryVariable's contents only happen when body terminates.
dict values dictionaryValue ?globPattern?
Return a list of all values in the given dictionary value. If a pattern is supplied, only those
values that match it (according to the rules of string match) will be returned. The returned
values will be in the order of that the keys associated with those values were inserted into the
dictionary.
dict with dictionaryVariable ?key ...? body
Execute the Tcl script in body with the value for each key in dictionaryVariable mapped (in a
manner similarly to dict update) to a variable with the same name. Where one or more keys are
available, these indicate a chain of nested dictionaries, with the innermost dictionary being the
one opened out for the execution of body. As with dict update, making dictionaryVariable
unreadable will make the updates to the dictionary be discarded, and this also happens if the
contents of dictionaryVariable are adjusted so that the chain of dictionaries no longer exists.
The result of dict with is (unless some kind of error occurs) the result of the evaluation of
body.
The variables are mapped in the scope enclosing the dict with; it is recommended that this command
only be used in a local scope (procedure, lambda term for apply, or method). Because of this, the
variables set by dict with will continue to exist after the command finishes (unless explicitly
unset). Note that the mapping of values to variables does not use traces; changes to the
dictionaryVariable's contents only happen when body terminates.
If the dictionaryVariable contains a value that is not a dictionary at the point when the body
terminates (which can easily happen if the name is the same as any of the keys in dictionary) then
an error occurs at that point. This command is thus not recommended for use when the keys in the
dictionary are expected to clash with the dictionaryVariable name itself. Where the contained key
does map to a dictionary, the net effect is to combine that inner dictionary into the outer
dictionary; see the EXAMPLES below for an illustration of this.
DICTIONARY VALUES
Dictionaries are values that contain an efficient, order-preserving mapping from arbitrary keys to
arbitrary values. Each key in the dictionary maps to a single value. They have a textual format that is
exactly that of any list with an even number of elements, with each mapping in the dictionary being
represented as two items in the list. When a command takes a dictionary and produces a new dictionary
based on it (either returning it or writing it back into the variable that the starting dictionary was
read from) the new dictionary will have the same order of keys, modulo any deleted keys and with new keys
added on to the end. When a string is interpreted as a dictionary and it would otherwise have duplicate
keys, only the last value for a particular key is used; the others are ignored, meaning that, “apple
banana” and “apple carrot apple banana” are equivalent dictionaries (with different string
representations).
Operations that derive a new dictionary from an old one (e.g., updates like dict set and dict unset)
preserve the order of keys in the dictionary. The exceptions to this are for any new keys they add, which
are appended to the sequence, and any keys that are removed, which are excised from the order.
EXAMPLES
Basic dictionary usage:
# Make a dictionary to map extensions to descriptions
set filetypes [dict create .txt "Text File" .tcl "Tcl File"]
# Add/update the dictionary
dict set filetypes .tcl "Tcl Script"
dict set filetypes .tm "Tcl Module"
dict set filetypes .gif "GIF Image"
dict set filetypes .png "PNG Image"
# Simple read from the dictionary
set ext ".tcl"
set desc [dict get $filetypes $ext]
puts "$ext is for a $desc"
# Somewhat more complex, with existence test
foreach filename [glob *] {
set ext [file extension $filename]
if {[dict exists $filetypes $ext]} {
puts "$filename is a [dict get $filetypes $ext]"
}
}
Constructing and using nested dictionaries:
# Data for one employee
dict set employeeInfo 12345-A forenames "Joe"
dict set employeeInfo 12345-A surname "Schmoe"
dict set employeeInfo 12345-A street "147 Short Street"
dict set employeeInfo 12345-A city "Springfield"
dict set employeeInfo 12345-A phone "555-1234"
# Data for another employee
dict set employeeInfo 98372-J forenames "Anne"
dict set employeeInfo 98372-J surname "Other"
dict set employeeInfo 98372-J street "32995 Oakdale Way"
dict set employeeInfo 98372-J city "Springfield"
dict set employeeInfo 98372-J phone "555-8765"
# The above data probably ought to come from a database...
# Print out some employee info
set i 0
puts "There are [dict size $employeeInfo] employees"
dict for {id info} $employeeInfo {
puts "Employee #[incr i]: $id"
dict with info {
puts " Name: $forenames $surname"
puts " Address: $street, $city"
puts " Telephone: $phone"
}
}
# Another way to iterate and pick out names...
foreach id [dict keys $employeeInfo] {
puts "Hello, [dict get $employeeInfo $id forenames]!"
}
A localizable version of string toupper:
# Set up the basic C locale
set capital [dict create C [dict create]]
foreach c [split {abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz} ""] {
dict set capital C $c [string toupper $c]
}
# English locales can luckily share the "C" locale
dict set capital en [dict get $capital C]
dict set capital en_US [dict get $capital C]
dict set capital en_GB [dict get $capital C]
# ... and so on for other supported languages ...
# Now get the mapping for the current locale and use it.
set upperCaseMap [dict get $capital $env(LANG)]
set upperCase [string map $upperCaseMap $string]
Showing the detail of dict with:
proc sumDictionary {varName} {
upvar 1 $varName vbl
foreach key [dict keys $vbl] {
# Manufacture an entry in the subdictionary
dict set vbl $key total 0
# Add the values and remove the old
dict with vbl $key {
set total [expr {$x + $y + $z}]
unset x y z
}
}
puts "last total was $total, for key $key"
}
set myDict {
a {x 1 y 2 z 3}
b {x 6 y 5 z 4}
}
sumDictionary myDict
# prints: last total was 15, for key b
puts "dictionary is now \"$myDict\""
# prints: dictionary is now "a {total 6} b {total 15}"
When dict with is used with a key that clashes with the name of the dictionary variable:
set foo {foo {a b} bar 2 baz 3}
dict with foo {}
puts $foo
# prints: a b foo {a b} bar 2 baz 3
SEE ALSO
append(3tcl), array(3tcl), foreach(3tcl), incr(3tcl), list(3tcl), lappend(3tcl), lmap(3tcl), set(3tcl)
KEYWORDS
dictionary, create, update, lookup, iterate, filter, map
Tcl 8.5 dict(3tcl)