Provided by: tcl8.6-doc_8.6.14+dfsg-1build1_all bug

NAME

       Tcl_CreateObjCommand,       Tcl_DeleteCommand,       Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken,      Tcl_GetCommandInfo,
       Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken,   Tcl_SetCommandInfo,    Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken,    Tcl_GetCommandName,
       Tcl_GetCommandFullName, Tcl_GetCommandFromObj - implement new commands in C

SYNOPSIS

       #include <tcl.h>

       Tcl_Command
       Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, cmdName, proc, clientData, deleteProc)

       int
       Tcl_DeleteCommand(interp, cmdName)

       int
       Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, token)

       int
       Tcl_GetCommandInfo(interp, cmdName, infoPtr)

       int
       Tcl_SetCommandInfo(interp, cmdName, infoPtr)

       int
       Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken(token, infoPtr)

       int
       Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken(token, infoPtr)

       const char *
       Tcl_GetCommandName(interp, token)

       void
       Tcl_GetCommandFullName(interp, token, objPtr)

       Tcl_Command
       Tcl_GetCommandFromObj(interp, objPtr)

ARGUMENTS

       Tcl_Interp *interp (in)                     Interpreter in which to create a new command or that contains
                                                   a command.

       const char *cmdName (in)                    Name of command.

       Tcl_ObjCmdProc *proc (in)                   Implementation of  the  new  command:  proc  will  be  called
                                                   whenever cmdName is invoked as a command.

       ClientData clientData (in)                  Arbitrary one-word value to pass to proc and deleteProc.

       Tcl_CmdDeleteProc *deleteProc (in)          Procedure   to  call  before  cmdName  is  deleted  from  the
                                                   interpreter; allows for command-specific  cleanup.  If  NULL,
                                                   then no procedure is called before the command is deleted.

       Tcl_Command token (in)                      Token   for   command,   returned   by   previous   call   to
                                                   Tcl_CreateObjCommand.   The  command  must  not   have   been
                                                   deleted.

       Tcl_CmdInfo *infoPtr (in/out)               Pointer  to  structure containing various information about a
                                                   Tcl command.

       Tcl_Obj *objPtr (in)                        Value containing the name of a Tcl command.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       Tcl_CreateObjCommand defines a new command in interp and associates it  with  procedure  proc  such  that
       whenever  name  is  invoked as a Tcl command (e.g., via a call to Tcl_EvalObjEx) the Tcl interpreter will
       call proc to process the command.

       Tcl_CreateObjCommand deletes any existing command name already associated with the  interpreter  (however
       see  below  for  an exception where the existing command is not deleted).  It returns a token that may be
       used to refer to the command in  subsequent  calls  to  Tcl_GetCommandName.   If  name  contains  any  ::
       namespace  qualifiers,  then  the  command  is added to the specified namespace; otherwise the command is
       added to the global namespace.  If Tcl_CreateObjCommand is called for  an  interpreter  that  is  in  the
       process  of  being  deleted, then it does not create a new command and it returns NULL.  proc should have
       arguments and result that match the type Tcl_ObjCmdProc:

              typedef int Tcl_ObjCmdProc(
                      ClientData clientData,
                      Tcl_Interp *interp,
                      int objc,
                      Tcl_Obj *const objv[]);

       When proc is invoked, the clientData and interp parameters will be copies of the  clientData  and  interp
       arguments  given  to  Tcl_CreateObjCommand.  Typically, clientData points to an application-specific data
       structure that describes what to do when the command procedure is invoked. Objc  and  objv  describe  the
       arguments to the command, objc giving the number of argument values (including the command name) and objv
       giving the values of the arguments.  The objv array will contain objc values, pointing  to  the  argument
       values.  Unlike argv[argv] used in a string-based command procedure, objv[objc] will not contain NULL.

       Additionally,  when  proc  is invoked, it must not modify the contents of the objv array by assigning new
       pointer values to any element of the array (for example, objv[2] = NULL) because this will  cause  memory
       to  be lost and the runtime stack to be corrupted.  The const in the declaration of objv will cause ANSI-
       compliant compilers to report any such attempted assignment as an error.  However, it  is  acceptable  to
       modify  the  internal  representation  of any individual value argument.  For instance, the user may call
       Tcl_GetIntFromObj on objv[2] to obtain the integer representation of that value; that call may change the
       type of the value that objv[2] points at, but will not change where objv[2] points.

       proc  must  return  an  integer  code  that  is  either  TCL_OK,  TCL_ERROR,  TCL_RETURN,  TCL_BREAK,  or
       TCL_CONTINUE.  See the Tcl overview man page for details on what these codes mean.  Most normal  commands
       will  only  return  TCL_OK or TCL_ERROR.  In addition, if proc needs to return a non-empty result, it can
       call Tcl_SetObjResult to set the interpreter's result.  In the case of a TCL_OK return  code  this  gives
       the  result  of the command, and in the case of TCL_ERROR this gives an error message.  Before invoking a
       command procedure, Tcl_EvalObjEx sets interpreter's result to point to  a  value  representing  an  empty
       string, so simple commands can return an empty result by doing nothing at all.

       The  contents  of  the objv array belong to Tcl and are not guaranteed to persist once proc returns: proc
       should not modify them.  Call Tcl_SetObjResult if you want to return something from the objv array.

       Ordinarily,  Tcl_CreateObjCommand  deletes  any  existing  command  name  already  associated  with   the
       interpreter.   However,  if  the  existing  command  was created by a previous call to Tcl_CreateCommand,
       Tcl_CreateObjCommand does not delete the command but instead arranges for the Tcl interpreter to call the
       Tcl_ObjCmdProc  proc  in  the  future.   The  old string-based Tcl_CmdProc associated with the command is
       retained and its address can be obtained  by  subsequent  Tcl_GetCommandInfo  calls.  This  is  done  for
       backwards compatibility.

       DeleteProc   will   be   invoked  when  (if)  name  is  deleted.   This  can  occur  through  a  call  to
       Tcl_DeleteCommand, Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken, or Tcl_DeleteInterp, or by replacing name in another  call
       to  Tcl_CreateObjCommand.  DeleteProc is invoked before the command is deleted, and gives the application
       an opportunity to release any structures associated with the command.  DeleteProc should  have  arguments
       and result that match the type Tcl_CmdDeleteProc:

              typedef void Tcl_CmdDeleteProc(
                      ClientData clientData);

       The clientData argument will be the same as the clientData argument passed to Tcl_CreateObjCommand.

       Tcl_DeleteCommand  deletes  a  command  from a command interpreter.  Once the call completes, attempts to
       invoke cmdName in interp will result in errors.  If cmdName is not bound as  a  command  in  interp  then
       Tcl_DeleteCommand  does  nothing  and  returns -1;  otherwise it returns 0.  There are no restrictions on
       cmdName:  it may refer to a built-in command, an application-specific command, or a  Tcl  procedure.   If
       name contains any :: namespace qualifiers, the command is deleted from the specified namespace.

       Given  a  token  returned  by Tcl_CreateObjCommand, Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken deletes the command from a
       command interpreter.  It will delete a command even if that command has  been  renamed.   Once  the  call
       completes,  attempts to invoke the command in interp will result in errors.  If the command corresponding
       to token has already been deleted from  interp  then  Tcl_DeleteCommand  does  nothing  and  returns  -1;
       otherwise it returns 0.

       Tcl_GetCommandInfo checks to see whether its cmdName argument exists as a command in interp.  cmdName may
       include :: namespace qualifiers to identify a command in a particular namespace.  If the command  is  not
       found, then it returns 0.  Otherwise it places information about the command in the Tcl_CmdInfo structure
       pointed to by infoPtr and returns 1.  A Tcl_CmdInfo structure has the following fields:

              typedef struct Tcl_CmdInfo {
                  int isNativeObjectProc;
                  Tcl_ObjCmdProc *objProc;
                  ClientData objClientData;
                  Tcl_CmdProc *proc;
                  ClientData clientData;
                  Tcl_CmdDeleteProc *deleteProc;
                  ClientData deleteData;
                  Tcl_Namespace *namespacePtr;
              } Tcl_CmdInfo;

       The isNativeObjectProc field has the value 1 if Tcl_CreateObjCommand was called to register the  command;
       it  is  0 if only Tcl_CreateCommand was called.  It allows a program to determine whether it is faster to
       call objProc or proc: objProc is normally faster if isNativeObjectProc  has  the  value  1.   The  fields
       objProc   and   objClientData   have   the   same  meaning  as  the  proc  and  clientData  arguments  to
       Tcl_CreateObjCommand; they hold  information  about  the  value-based  command  procedure  that  the  Tcl
       interpreter  calls  to  implement the command.  The fields proc and clientData hold information about the
       string-based command procedure that implements the command.  If Tcl_CreateCommand  was  called  for  this
       command,  this  is the procedure passed to it; otherwise, this is a compatibility procedure registered by
       Tcl_CreateObjCommand that simply calls the command's value-based procedure after  converting  its  string
       arguments  to  Tcl  values.   The  field deleteData is the ClientData value to pass to deleteProc;  it is
       normally the same as clientData but may be set independently using the Tcl_SetCommandInfo procedure.  The
       field namespacePtr holds a pointer to the Tcl_Namespace that contains the command.

       Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken  is  identical  to  Tcl_GetCommandInfo  except  that  it uses a command token
       returned from Tcl_CreateObjCommand in place of the command name.  If the  token  parameter  is  NULL,  it
       returns 0; otherwise, it returns 1 and fills in the structure designated by infoPtr.

       Tcl_SetCommandInfo is used to modify the procedures and ClientData values associated with a command.  Its
       cmdName argument is the name of a command in interp.  cmdName may  include  ::  namespace  qualifiers  to
       identify  a  command  in  a particular namespace.  If this command does not exist then Tcl_SetCommandInfo
       returns 0.  Otherwise, it copies the information from  *infoPtr  to  Tcl's  internal  structure  for  the
       command and returns 1.

       Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken  is  identical  to Tcl_SetCommandInfo except that it takes a command token as
       returned by Tcl_CreateObjCommand instead of the command name.  If the token parameter is NULL, it returns
       0.   Otherwise,  it  copies the information from *infoPtr to Tcl's internal structure for the command and
       returns 1.

       Note that Tcl_SetCommandInfo and Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken both allow the ClientData  for  a  command's
       deletion procedure to be given a different value than the ClientData for its command procedure.

       Note  that  neither Tcl_SetCommandInfo nor Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken will change a command's namespace.
       Use Tcl_Eval to call the rename command to do that.

       Tcl_GetCommandName provides a mechanism for tracking commands that have  been  renamed.   Given  a  token
       returned by Tcl_CreateObjCommand when the command was created, Tcl_GetCommandName returns the string name
       of the command.  If the command has been renamed since it was created,  then  Tcl_GetCommandName  returns
       the  current name.  This name does not include any :: namespace qualifiers.  The command corresponding to
       token must not have been deleted.  The string returned by Tcl_GetCommandName is in dynamic  memory  owned
       by  Tcl  and  is  only  guaranteed  to retain its value as long as the command is not deleted or renamed;
       callers should copy the string if they need to keep it for a long time.

       Tcl_GetCommandFullName produces the fully qualified name of a command from a command  token.   The  name,
       including all namespace prefixes, is appended to the value specified by objPtr.

       Tcl_GetCommandFromObj  returns  a  token for the command specified by the name in a Tcl_Obj.  The command
       name is resolved relative to the current namespace.  Returns NULL if the command is not found.

SEE ALSO

       Tcl_CreateCommand(3tcl), Tcl_ResetResult(3tcl), Tcl_SetObjResult(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       bind, command, create, delete, namespace, value