diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/ParseCmd.3')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ParseCmd.3 | 45 |
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ParseCmd.3 b/doc/ParseCmd.3 index b5fc6d0..f3b3aeb 100644 --- a/doc/ParseCmd.3 +++ b/doc/ParseCmd.3 @@ -80,7 +80,6 @@ if the parse was successful. Points to structure that was filled in by a previous call to \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR, etc. .BE - .SH DESCRIPTION .PP These procedures parse Tcl commands or portions of Tcl commands such as @@ -202,30 +201,30 @@ If an error or other exception occurs while evaluating the tokens (such as a reference to a non-existent variable) then the return value is NULL and an error message is left in \fIinterp\fR's result. The use of \fBTcl_EvalTokens\fR is deprecated. - .SH "TCL_PARSE STRUCTURE" .PP \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR return parse information in two data structures, Tcl_Parse and Tcl_Token: +.PP .CS typedef struct Tcl_Parse { - const char *\fIcommentStart\fR; - int \fIcommentSize\fR; - const char *\fIcommandStart\fR; - int \fIcommandSize\fR; - int \fInumWords\fR; - Tcl_Token *\fItokenPtr\fR; - int \fInumTokens\fR; - ... -} Tcl_Parse; + const char *\fIcommentStart\fR; + int \fIcommentSize\fR; + const char *\fIcommandStart\fR; + int \fIcommandSize\fR; + int \fInumWords\fR; + Tcl_Token *\fItokenPtr\fR; + int \fInumTokens\fR; + ... +} \fBTcl_Parse\fR; typedef struct Tcl_Token { - int \fItype\fR; - const char *\fIstart\fR; - int \fIsize\fR; - int \fInumComponents\fR; -} Tcl_Token; + int \fItype\fR; + const char *\fIstart\fR; + int \fIsize\fR; + int \fInumComponents\fR; +} \fBTcl_Token\fR; .CE .PP The first five fields of a Tcl_Parse structure @@ -267,6 +266,7 @@ the \fInumComponents\fR field describes how many of these there are. The \fItype\fR field has one of the following values: .TP 20 \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR +. This token ordinarily describes one word of a command but it may also describe a quoted or braced string in an expression. The token describes a component of the script that is @@ -281,29 +281,32 @@ number of sub-tokens that make up the word, including sub-tokens of \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR and \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR tokens. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_SIMPLE_WORD\fR +. This token has the same meaning as \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR, except that the word is guaranteed to consist of a single \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR sub-token. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 1. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_EXPAND_WORD\fR -.VS 8.5 +. This token has the same meaning as \fBTCL_TOKEN_WORD\fR, except that the command parser notes this word began with the expansion prefix \fB{*}\fR, indicating that after substitution, the list value of this word should be expanded to form multiple arguments in command evaluation. This token type can only be created by Tcl_ParseCommand. -.VE 8.5 .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_TEXT\fR +. The token describes a range of literal text that is part of a word. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_BS\fR +. The token describes a backslash sequence such as \fB\en\fR or \fB\e0xa3\fR. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_COMMAND\fR +. The token describes a command whose result must be substituted into the word. The token includes the square brackets that surround the command. The \fInumComponents\fR field is always 0 (the nested command @@ -311,6 +314,7 @@ is not parsed; call \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR recursively if you want to see its tokens). .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR +. The token describes a variable substitution, including the \fB$\fR, variable name, and array index (if there is one) up through the close parenthesis that terminates the index. This token is followed @@ -326,6 +330,7 @@ array index. The \fInumComponents\fR field includes nested sub-tokens that are part of \fBTCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE\fR tokens in the array index. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR +. The token describes one subexpression of an expression (or an entire expression). A subexpression may consist of a value @@ -352,6 +357,7 @@ counts the total number of sub-tokens that make up the subexpression; this includes the sub-tokens for any nested \fBTCL_TOKEN_SUB_EXPR\fR tokens. .TP \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR +. The token describes one operator of an expression such as \fB&&\fR or \fBhypot\fR. A \fBTCL_TOKEN_OPERATOR\fR token is always preceded by a @@ -383,7 +389,6 @@ 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 -.VS 8.5 \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. @@ -392,7 +397,6 @@ of \fBTCL_TOKEN_EXPAND_WORD\fR token for the second word, followed by sub-tokens for that word, and so on until all \fInumWords\fR have been accounted for. -.VE 8.5 .PP After \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR returns, the first token pointed to by the \fItokenPtr\fR field of the @@ -459,6 +463,5 @@ There are additional fields in the Tcl_Parse structure after the \fBTcl_ParseCommand\fR, \fBTcl_ParseExpr\fR, \fBTcl_ParseBraces\fR, \fBTcl_ParseQuotedString\fR, and \fBTcl_ParseVarName\fR; they should not be referenced by code outside of these procedures. - .SH KEYWORDS backslash substitution, braces, command, expression, parse, token, variable substitution |