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author | jan.nijtmans <nijtmans@users.sourceforge.net> | 2015-09-04 07:23:25 (GMT) |
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committer | jan.nijtmans <nijtmans@users.sourceforge.net> | 2015-09-04 07:23:25 (GMT) |
commit | 67805e59cef248f01fd68e0479ad848ac1f08485 (patch) | |
tree | 74da9f2b5899274f2be2187a2e77e4a9b2aad51e /doc/ParseCmd.3 | |
parent | 33243cc1f9d89ae5e3ab90854bd7e3dfbe76773a (diff) | |
download | tcl-67805e59cef248f01fd68e0479ad848ac1f08485.zip tcl-67805e59cef248f01fd68e0479ad848ac1f08485.tar.gz tcl-67805e59cef248f01fd68e0479ad848ac1f08485.tar.bz2 |
Remove unnecessary end-of-line spacing (preparing for some further documentation updates)
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/ParseCmd.3')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ParseCmd.3 | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ParseCmd.3 b/doc/ParseCmd.3 index 7090dd3..667d697 100644 --- a/doc/ParseCmd.3 +++ b/doc/ParseCmd.3 @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ '\" '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. -'\" +'\" .TH Tcl_ParseCommand 3 8.3 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" .so man.macros .BS @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ following \fIstart\fR up to the first null character. .AP int nested in Non-zero means that the script is part of a command substitution so an unquoted close bracket should be treated as a command terminator. If zero, -close brackets have no special meaning. +close brackets have no special meaning. .AP int append in Non-zero means that \fI*parsePtr\fR already contains valid tokens; the new tokens should be appended to those already present. Zero means that @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ result, and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR. enclosed in braces such as \fB{hello}\fR or \fB{string \et with \et tabs}\fR from the beginning of its argument \fIstart\fR. -The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB{\fR. +The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB{\fR. If the braced string was parsed successfully, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR, fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR @@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR or \fI*termPtr\fR. \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR parses a double-quoted string such as \fB"sum is [expr {$a+$b}]"\fR from the beginning of the argument \fIstart\fR. -The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB\N'34'\fR. +The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB\N'34'\fR. If the double-quoted string was parsed successfully, \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR, fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR @@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ and no information is left at \fI*parsePtr\fR or \fI*termPtr\fR. \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR parses a Tcl variable reference such as \fB$abc\fR or \fB$x([expr {$index + 1}])\fR from the beginning of its \fIstart\fR argument. -The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB$\fR. +The first character of \fIstart\fR must be \fB$\fR. If a variable name was parsed successfully, \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR returns \fBTCL_OK\fR and fills in the structure pointed to by \fIparsePtr\fR with information about the structure of the variable name @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ a Tcl_Parse structure. The tokens typically consist of all the tokens in a word or all the tokens that make up the index for a reference to an array variable. \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR performs the substitutions requested by the tokens and concatenates the -resulting values. +resulting values. The return value from \fBTcl_EvalTokensStandard\fR is a Tcl completion code with one of the values \fBTCL_OK\fR, \fBTCL_ERROR\fR, \fBTCL_RETURN\fR, \fBTCL_BREAK\fR, or \fBTCL_CONTINUE\fR, or possibly @@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ character that terminates the last comment. If the command is not preceded by any comments, \fIcommentSize\fR is 0. \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR also sets the \fIcommandStart\fR field to point to the first character of the first -word in the command (skipping any comments and leading space) and +word in the command (skipping any comments and leading space) and \fIcommandSize\fR gives the total number of bytes in the command, including the character pointed to by \fIcommandStart\fR up to and including the newline, close bracket, or semicolon character that @@ -350,7 +350,7 @@ just the \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token. Each operand is described by a \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR token. Otherwise, the subexpression is a value described by one of the token types \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR, -\fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR, +\fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR, \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR, and \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR. The \fInumComponents\fR field counts the total number of sub-tokens that make up the subexpression; @@ -389,7 +389,7 @@ is always 0. After \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR returns, the first token pointed to by the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the Tcl_Parse structure always has type \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR or -\fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR or \fBTCL_TOKEN_EXPAND_WORD\fR. +\fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR or \fBTCL_TOKEN_EXPAND_WORD\fR. It is followed by the sub-tokens that must be concatenated to produce the value of that word. The next token is the \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR or \fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR |