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diff --git a/doc/Interp.3 b/doc/Interp.3 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5610246 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/Interp.3 @@ -0,0 +1,125 @@ +'\" +'\" Copyright (c) 1989-1993 The Regents of the University of California. +'\" Copyright (c) 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. +'\" +'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution +'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. +'\" +'\" SCCS: @(#) Interp.3 1.16 96/06/06 13:48:02 +'\" +.so man.macros +.TH Tcl_Interp 3 7.5 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" +.BS +.SH NAME +Tcl_Interp \- client-visible fields of interpreter structures +.SH SYNOPSIS +.nf +\fB#include <tcl.h>\fR +.sp +typedef struct { + char *\fIresult\fR; + Tcl_FreeProc *\fIfreeProc\fR; + int \fIerrorLine\fR; +} Tcl_Interp; + +typedef void Tcl_FreeProc(char *\fIblockPtr\fR); +.BE + +.SH DESCRIPTION +.PP +The \fBTcl_CreateInterp\fR procedure returns a pointer to a Tcl_Interp +structure. This pointer is then passed into other Tcl procedures +to process commands in the interpreter and perform other operations +on the interpreter. Interpreter structures contain many many fields +that are used by Tcl, but only three that may be accessed by +clients: \fIresult\fR, \fIfreeProc\fR, and \fIerrorLine\fR. +.PP +The \fIresult\fR and \fIfreeProc\fR fields are used to return +results or error messages from commands. +This information is returned by command procedures back to \fBTcl_Eval\fR, +and by \fBTcl_Eval\fR back to its callers. +The \fIresult\fR field points to the string that represents the +result or error message, and the \fIfreeProc\fR field tells how +to dispose of the storage for the string when it isn't needed anymore. +The easiest way for command procedures to manipulate these +fields is to call procedures like \fBTcl_SetResult\fR +or \fBTcl_AppendResult\fR; they +will hide all the details of managing the fields. +The description below is for those procedures that manipulate the +fields directly. +.PP +Whenever a command procedure returns, it must ensure +that the \fIresult\fR field of its interpreter points to the string +being returned by the command. +The \fIresult\fR field must always point to a valid string. +If a command wishes to return no result then \fIinterp->result\fR +should point to an empty string. +Normally, results are assumed to be statically allocated, +which means that the contents will not change before the next time +\fBTcl_Eval\fR is called or some other command procedure is invoked. +.VS +In this case, the \fIfreeProc\fR field must be zero. +Alternatively, a command procedure may dynamically +allocate its return value (e.g. using \fBTcl_Alloc\fR) +and store a pointer to it in \fIinterp->result\fR. +In this case, the command procedure must also set \fIinterp->freeProc\fR +to the address of a procedure that can free the value, or \fBTCL_DYNAMIC\fR +if the storage was allocated directly by Tcl or by a call to +\fBTcl_Alloc\fR. +.VE +If \fIinterp->freeProc\fR is non-zero, then Tcl will call \fIfreeProc\fR +to free the space pointed to by \fIinterp->result\fR before it +invokes the next command. +If a client procedure overwrites \fIinterp->result\fR when +\fIinterp->freeProc\fR is non-zero, then it is responsible for calling +\fIfreeProc\fR to free the old \fIinterp->result\fR (the \fBTcl_FreeResult\fR +macro should be used for this purpose). +.PP +\fIFreeProc\fR should have arguments and result that match the +\fBTcl_FreeProc\fR declaration above: it receives a single +argument which is a pointer to the result value to free. +.VS +In most applications \fBTCL_DYNAMIC\fR is the only non-zero value ever +used for \fIfreeProc\fR. +.VE +However, an application may store a different procedure address +in \fIfreeProc\fR in order to use an alternate memory allocator +or in order to do other cleanup when the result memory is freed. +.PP +As part of processing each command, \fBTcl_Eval\fR initializes +\fIinterp->result\fR +and \fIinterp->freeProc\fR just before calling the command procedure for +the command. The \fIfreeProc\fR field will be initialized to zero, +and \fIinterp->result\fR will point to an empty string. Commands that +do not return any value can simply leave the fields alone. +Furthermore, the empty string pointed to by \fIresult\fR is actually +part of an array of \fBTCL_RESULT_SIZE\fR characters (approximately 200). +If a command wishes to return a short string, it can simply copy +it to the area pointed to by \fIinterp->result\fR. Or, it can use +the sprintf procedure to generate a short result string at the location +pointed to by \fIinterp->result\fR. +.PP +It is a general convention in Tcl-based applications that the result +of an interpreter is normally in the initialized state described +in the previous paragraph. +Procedures that manipulate an interpreter's result (e.g. by +returning an error) will generally assume that the result +has been initialized when the procedure is called. +If such a procedure is to be called after the result has been +changed, then \fBTcl_ResetResult\fR should be called first to +reset the result to its initialized state. +.PP +The \fIerrorLine\fR +field is valid only after \fBTcl_Eval\fR returns +a \fBTCL_ERROR\fR return code. In this situation the \fIerrorLine\fR +field identifies the line number of the command being executed when +the error occurred. The line numbers are relative to the command +being executed: 1 means the first line of the command passed to +\fBTcl_Eval\fR, 2 means the second line, and so on. +The \fIerrorLine\fR field is typically used in conjunction with +\fBTcl_AddErrorInfo\fR to report information about where an error +occurred. +\fIErrorLine\fR should not normally be modified except by \fBTcl_Eval\fR. + +.SH KEYWORDS +free, initialized, interpreter, malloc, result |