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

NAME

       Tcl_SetObjResult,     Tcl_GetObjResult,     Tcl_SetResult,     Tcl_GetStringResult,     Tcl_AppendResult,
       Tcl_AppendResultVA, Tcl_AppendElement, Tcl_ResetResult, Tcl_TransferResult, Tcl_FreeResult  -  manipulate
       Tcl result

SYNOPSIS

       #include <tcl.h>

       Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, objPtr)

       Tcl_Obj *
       Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)

       Tcl_SetResult(interp, result, freeProc)

       const char *
       Tcl_GetStringResult(interp)

       Tcl_AppendResult(interp, result, result, ... , (char *)NULL)

       Tcl_AppendResultVA(interp, argList)

       Tcl_ResetResult(interp)

       Tcl_TransferResult(sourceInterp, code, targetInterp)                                                      │

       Tcl_AppendElement(interp, element)

       Tcl_FreeResult(interp)

ARGUMENTS

       Tcl_Interp *interp (out)                Interpreter whose result is to be modified or read.

       Tcl_Obj *objPtr (in)                    Tcl value to become result for interp.

       char *result (in)                       String value to become result for interp or to be appended to the
                                               existing result.

       const char *element (in)                String value to append as a list element to the  existing  result
                                               of interp.

       Tcl_FreeProc *freeProc (in)             Address  of  procedure  to  call to release storage at result, or
                                               TCL_STATIC, TCL_DYNAMIC, or TCL_VOLATILE.

       va_list argList (in)                    An argument list which must have been initialized using va_start,
                                               and cleared using va_end.

       Tcl_Interp *sourceInterp (in)           Interpreter   that  the  result  and  return  options  should  be │
                                               transferred from.

       Tcl_Interp *targetInterp (in)           Interpreter  that  the  result  and  return  options  should   be │
                                               transferred to.

       int code (in)                           Return code value that controls transfer of return options.       │
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  procedures described here are utilities for manipulating the result value in a Tcl interpreter.  The
       interpreter result  may  be  either  a  Tcl  value  or  a  string.   For  example,  Tcl_SetObjResult  and
       Tcl_SetResult   set  the  interpreter  result  to,  respectively,  a  value  and  a  string.   Similarly,
       Tcl_GetObjResult and Tcl_GetStringResult return the interpreter result as a value and as a  string.   The
       procedures  always keep the string and value forms of the interpreter result consistent.  For example, if
       Tcl_SetObjResult is called to set the result to a value, then  Tcl_GetStringResult  is  called,  it  will
       return the value's string representation.

       Tcl_SetObjResult  arranges  for  objPtr  to be the result for interp, replacing any existing result.  The
       result is left pointing to the value referenced by objPtr.  objPtr's reference count is incremented since
       there  is  now  a  new  reference  to  it  from  interp.  The reference count for any old result value is
       decremented and the old result value is freed if no references to it remain.

       Tcl_GetObjResult returns the result  for  interp  as  a  value.   The  value's  reference  count  is  not
       incremented;  if  the  caller  needs  to  retain  a  long-term  pointer  to  the  value  they  should use
       Tcl_IncrRefCount to increment its reference count in order to keep it  from  being  freed  too  early  or
       accidentally changed.

       Tcl_SetResult  arranges  for result to be the result for the current Tcl command in interp, replacing any
       existing result.  The freeProc argument specifies how to manage the storage for the result  argument;  it
       is  discussed  in  the section THE TCL_FREEPROC ARGUMENT TO TCL_SETRESULT below.  If result is NULL, then
       freeProc is ignored and Tcl_SetResult re-initializes interp's result to point to an empty string.

       Tcl_GetStringResult returns the result for interp as a string.  If the result was set to  a  value  by  a
       Tcl_SetObjResult  call, the value form will be converted to a string and returned.  If the value's string
       representation contains null bytes, this conversion will lose information.  For this reason,  programmers
       are  encouraged  to  write  their  code  to use the new value API procedures and to call Tcl_GetObjResult
       instead.

       Tcl_ResetResult clears the result for interp and leaves the result in its normal empty initialized state.
       If  the  result  is  a  value,  its  reference count is decremented and the result is left pointing to an
       unshared value representing an empty string.  If the result is a dynamically allocated string, its memory
       is  free*d and the result is left as a empty string.  Tcl_ResetResult also clears the error state managed
       by Tcl_AddErrorInfo, Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo, and Tcl_SetErrorCode.

       Tcl_AppendResult makes it easy to build up Tcl results in pieces.  It takes each of its result  arguments
       and  appends  them  in  order  to  the  current  result  associated with interp.  If the result is in its
       initialized empty state (e.g. a command procedure was just invoked or Tcl_ResetResult was  just  called),
       then Tcl_AppendResult sets the result to the concatenation of its result arguments.  Tcl_AppendResult may
       be called repeatedly as additional pieces of the result are produced.  Tcl_AppendResult takes care of all
       the  storage  management  issues  associated  with  managing interp's result, such as allocating a larger
       result area if necessary.  It also manages conversion to and from the result field of the interp so as to
       handle backward-compatibility with old-style extensions.  Any number of result arguments may be passed in
       a single call; the last argument in the list must be a NULL pointer.

       Tcl_AppendResultVA is the same as Tcl_AppendResult except that instead of taking  a  variable  number  of
       arguments it takes an argument list.

       Tcl_TransferResult  transfers  interpreter  state from sourceInterp to targetInterp. The two interpreters │
       must have been created in the same thread.  If sourceInterp and targetInterp are  the  same,  nothing  is │
       done.  Otherwise,  Tcl_TransferResult  moves the result from sourceInterp to targetInterp, and resets the │
       result in sourceInterp. It also moves the return options dictionary as  controlled  by  the  return  code │
       value code in the same manner as Tcl_GetReturnOptions.

DEPRECATED INTERFACES

   OLD STRING PROCEDURES
       Use  of  the  following  procedures  is  deprecated  since  they  manipulate  the Tcl result as a string.
       Procedures such as Tcl_SetObjResult that manipulate the result as  a  value  can  be  significantly  more
       efficient.

       Tcl_AppendElement  is  similar  to  Tcl_AppendResult  in that it allows results to be built up in pieces.
       However, Tcl_AppendElement takes only a single element argument and  it  appends  that  argument  to  the
       current  result  as a proper Tcl list element.  Tcl_AppendElement adds backslashes or braces if necessary
       to ensure that interp's result can be parsed as a list and that element will be  extracted  as  a  single
       element.   Under  normal conditions, Tcl_AppendElement will add a space character to interp's result just
       before adding the new list element, so that the list elements  in  the  result  are  properly  separated.
       However  if  the  new  list  element  is the first in a list or sub-list (i.e. interp's current result is
       empty, or consists of the single character “{”, or ends in the characters “ {”) then no space is added.

       Tcl_FreeResult performs part of the work of Tcl_ResetResult.  It frees  up  the  memory  associated  with
       interp's  result.   It  also  sets  interp->freeProc to zero, but does not change interp->result or clear
       error state.  Tcl_FreeResult is most commonly used when a procedure is about to replace one result  value
       with another.

   DIRECT ACCESS TO INTERP->RESULT
       It  used to be legal for programs to directly read and write interp->result to manipulate the interpreter
       result.  The Tcl headers no longer permit this access by default, and C code still  doing  this  must  be
       updated   to   use   supported  routines  Tcl_GetObjResult,  Tcl_GetStringResult,  Tcl_SetObjResult,  and
       Tcl_SetResult.  As a migration aid, access can be restored with the compiler directive
              #define USE_INTERP_RESULT
       but this is meant only to offer life support to otherwise dead code.

THE TCL_FREEPROC ARGUMENT TO TCL_SETRESULT

       Tcl_SetResult's freeProc argument specifies how the Tcl system is to manage the storage  for  the  result
       argument.   If  Tcl_SetResult or Tcl_SetObjResult are called at a time when interp holds a string result,
       they do whatever is necessary to dispose of the old string result (see the Tcl_Interp  manual  entry  for
       details on this).

       If freeProc is TCL_STATIC it means that result refers to an area of static storage that is guaranteed not
       to be modified until at least the next call to Tcl_Eval.  If freeProc is TCL_DYNAMIC it means that result
       was  allocated  with  a  call to Tcl_Alloc and is now the property of the Tcl system.  Tcl_SetResult will
       arrange for the string's storage to be released by calling Tcl_Free when it  is  no  longer  needed.   If
       freeProc  is  TCL_VOLATILE  it  means  that  result  points  to  an  area  of memory that is likely to be
       overwritten when Tcl_SetResult returns (e.g. it points to something in a  stack  frame).   In  this  case
       Tcl_SetResult will make a copy of the string in dynamically allocated storage and arrange for the copy to
       be the result for the current Tcl command.

       If freeProc is not one of the values TCL_STATIC, TCL_DYNAMIC, and TCL_VOLATILE, then it is the address of
       a  procedure  that  Tcl  should  call  to  free the string.  This allows applications to use non-standard
       storage allocators.  When Tcl no longer needs the storage for the string, it will call freeProc. FreeProc
       should have arguments and result that match the type Tcl_FreeProc:

              typedef void Tcl_FreeProc(
                      char *blockPtr);

       When freeProc is called, its blockPtr will be set to the value of result passed to Tcl_SetResult.

SEE ALSO

       Tcl_AddErrorInfo, Tcl_CreateObjCommand, Tcl_SetErrorCode, Tcl_Interp, Tcl_GetReturnOptions

KEYWORDS

       append, command, element, list, value, result, return value, interpreter