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-rw-r--r--doc/Init.34
-rw-r--r--doc/Macintosh.3109
-rw-r--r--doc/OpenFileChnl.33
-rw-r--r--doc/OpenTcp.33
-rw-r--r--doc/SourceRCFile.34
-rw-r--r--doc/exec.n3
-rw-r--r--doc/fconfigure.n4
-rw-r--r--doc/file.n20
-rw-r--r--doc/filename.n57
-rw-r--r--doc/glob.n15
-rw-r--r--doc/open.n6
-rw-r--r--doc/puts.n3
-rw-r--r--doc/resource.n154
-rw-r--r--doc/source.n8
-rw-r--r--doc/tclvars.n72
15 files changed, 15 insertions, 450 deletions
diff --git a/doc/Init.3 b/doc/Init.3
index e78423e..fdc66c7 100644
--- a/doc/Init.3
+++ b/doc/Init.3
@@ -22,9 +22,7 @@ Interpreter to initialize.
.PP
\fBTcl_Init\fR is a helper procedure that finds and \fBsource\fR's the
\fBinit.tcl\fR script, which should exist somewhere on the Tcl library
-path. On Macintosh systems, it additionally checks for an \fBInit\fR
-resource and sources the contents of that resource if \fBinit.tcl\fR
-cannot be found.
+path.
.PP
\fBTcl_Init\fR is typically called from \fBTcl_AppInit\fR procedures.
diff --git a/doc/Macintosh.3 b/doc/Macintosh.3
deleted file mode 100644
index cd97578..0000000
--- a/doc/Macintosh.3
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,109 +0,0 @@
-'\"
-'\" Copyright (c) 1997-1998 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
-'\"
-'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
-'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
-'\"
-.so man.macros
-.TH Tcl_MacSetEventProc 3 "8.1" Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures"
-.BS
-.SH NAME
-Tcl_MacSetEventProc, Tcl_MacConvertTextResource, Tcl_MacEvalResource, Tcl_MacFindResource, Tcl_GetOSTypeFromObj, Tcl_SetOSTypeObj, Tcl_NewOSTypeObj \- procedures to handle Macintosh resources and other Macintosh specifics
-.SH SYNOPSIS
-.nf
-\fB#include <tcl.h>\fR
-.sp
-int
-\fBTcl_MacEvalResource\fR(\fIinterp, resourceName, resourceNumber, fileName\fR)
-.sp
-char*
-\fBTcl_MacConvertTextResource\fR(\fIresource\fR)
-.sp
-Handle
-\fBTcl_MacFindResource\fR(\fIinterp, resourceType, resourceName, resourceNumber, resFileRef, releaseIt\fR)
-.sp
-Tcl_Obj*
-\fBTcl_NewOSTypeObj\fR(\fInewOSType\fR)
-.sp
-void
-\fBTcl_SetOSTypeObj\fR(\fIobjPtr, newOSType\fR)
-.sp
-int
-\fBTcl_GetOSTypeFromObj\fR(\fIinterp, objPtr, osTypePtr\fR)
-.sp
-void
-\fBTcl_MacSetEventProc\fR(\fIprocPtr\fR)
-.SH ARGUMENTS
-.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in
-Interpreter to use for error reporting, or NULL if no error reporting is
-desired.
-.AP "CONST char" *resourceName in
-Name of TEXT resource to source, NULL if number should be used.
-.AP int resourceNumber in
-Resource id of source.
-.AP "CONST char" *fileName in
-Name of file to process. NULL if application resource.
-.AP Handle resource in
-Handle to TEXT resource.
-.AP long resourceType in
-Type of resource to load.
-.AP "CONST char" *resFileRef in
-Registered resource file reference, NULL if searching all open resource files.
-.AP int *releaseIt out
-Should we release this resource when done.
-.AP int newOSType in
-Int used to initialize the new object or set the object's value.
-.AP Tcl_Obj *objPtr in
-Object whose internal representation is to be set or retrieved.
-.AP osTypePtr out
-Place to store the resulting integer.
-.AP Tcl_MacConvertEventPtr procPtr in
-Reference to the new function to handle all incoming Mac events.
-
-.BE
-.SH INTRODUCTION
-.PP
-The described routines are used to implement the Macintosh specific
-\fBresource\fR command and the Mac specific notifier.. They manipulate
-or use Macintosh resources and provide administration for open
-resource file references.
-
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-.PP
-\fBTcl_MacEvalResource\fR extends the \fBsource\fR command to
-Macintosh resources. It sources Tcl code from a Text resource.
-Currently only sources the resource by name, file IDs may be supported
-at a later date.
-.PP
-\fBTcl_MacConvertTextResource\fR converts a TEXT resource into a Tcl
-suitable string. It mallocs the returned memory, converts ``\\r'' to
-``\\n'', and appends a null. The caller has the responsibility for
-freeing the memory.
-.PP
-\fBTcl_MacFindResource\fR provides a higher level interface for
-loading resources. It is used by \fBresource read\fR.
-.PP
-\fBTcl_NewOSTypeObj\fR is used to create a new resource name type
-object. The object type is "ostype".
-.PP
-\fBTcl_SetOSTypeObj\fR modifies an object to be a resource type and to
-have the specified long value.
-.PP
-\fBTcl_GetOSTypeFromObj\fR attempts to return an int from the Tcl
-object "objPtr". If the object is not already an int, an attempt will
-be made to convert it to one.
-.PP
-\fBTcl_MacSetEventProc\fR sets the event handling procedure for the
-application. This function will be passed all incoming Mac events.
-This function usually controls the console or some other entity like
-Tk.
-
-.SH RESOURCE TYPES
-.PP
-Resource types are 4-byte values used by the macintosh resource
-facility to tag parts of the resource fork in a file so that the OS
-knows how to handle them. As all 4 bytes are restricted to printable
-characters such a type can be interpreted as a 4 character string too.
-
-.SH KEYWORDS
-macintosh, mac, resource, notifier
diff --git a/doc/OpenFileChnl.3 b/doc/OpenFileChnl.3
index 80596d7..33c57fa 100644
--- a/doc/OpenFileChnl.3
+++ b/doc/OpenFileChnl.3
@@ -673,8 +673,7 @@ call. On Windows platforms, the handle is a file \fBHANDLE\fR when
the channel was created with \fBTcl_OpenFileChannel\fR,
\fBTcl_OpenCommandChannel\fR, or \fBTcl_MakeFileChannel\fR. Other
channel types may return a different type of handle on Windows
-platforms. On the Macintosh platform, the handle is a file reference
-number as returned from \fBHOpenDF\fR.
+platforms.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
DString(3), fconfigure(n), filename(n), fopen(3), Tcl_CreateChannel(3)
diff --git a/doc/OpenTcp.3 b/doc/OpenTcp.3
index 4ddb8a7..df14f44 100644
--- a/doc/OpenTcp.3
+++ b/doc/OpenTcp.3
@@ -167,8 +167,7 @@ replacement for the standard channel.
.PP
On Unix platforms, the socket handle is a Unix file descriptor as
returned by the \fBsocket\fR system call. On the Windows platform, the
-socket handle is a \fBSOCKET\fR as defined in the WinSock API. On the
-Macintosh platform, the socket handle is a \fBStreamPtr\fR.
+socket handle is a \fBSOCKET\fR as defined in the WinSock API.
.VE
.SH "SEE ALSO"
diff --git a/doc/SourceRCFile.3 b/doc/SourceRCFile.3
index ed949cd..5eb5472 100644
--- a/doc/SourceRCFile.3
+++ b/doc/SourceRCFile.3
@@ -26,10 +26,6 @@ sourced is obtained from the global variable \fBtcl_rcFileName\fR in
the interpreter given by \fIinterp\fR. If this variable is not
defined, or if the file it indicates cannot be found, no action is
taken.
-.PP
-On the Macintosh, after sourcing the rc file, this function will
-additionally source the TEXT resource indicated by the global variable
-\fBtcl_rcRsrcName\fR in \fIinterp\fR.
.SH KEYWORDS
application-specific initialization, main program, rc file
diff --git a/doc/exec.n b/doc/exec.n
index 3f85fd6..c5a2307 100644
--- a/doc/exec.n
+++ b/doc/exec.n
@@ -315,9 +315,6 @@ output may fail, hang Tcl, or even hang the system if their own private
console window is not available to them.
.RE
.TP
-\fBMacintosh\fR
-The \fBexec\fR command is not implemented and does not exist under Macintosh.
-.TP
\fBUnix\fR\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
The \fBexec\fR command is fully functional and works as described.
diff --git a/doc/fconfigure.n b/doc/fconfigure.n
index 11a4c4f..19c8a61 100644
--- a/doc/fconfigure.n
+++ b/doc/fconfigure.n
@@ -151,8 +151,8 @@ newline (\fBcrlf\fP) as the end of line representation. The end of line
representation can even change from line-to-line, and all cases are
translated to a newline. As the output translation mode, \fBauto\fR
chooses a platform specific representation; for sockets on all platforms
-Tcl chooses \fBcrlf\fR, for all Unix flavors, it chooses \fBlf\fR, for the
-Macintosh platform it chooses \fBcr\fR and for the various flavors of
+Tcl chooses \fBcrlf\fR, for all Unix flavors, it chooses \fBlf\fR and for
+the various flavors of
Windows it chooses \fBcrlf\fR. The default setting for
\fB\-translation\fR is \fBauto\fR for both input and output.
.TP
diff --git a/doc/file.n b/doc/file.n
index bc9eccc..6aeec52 100644
--- a/doc/file.n
+++ b/doc/file.n
@@ -67,13 +67,6 @@ attribute of the file. \fB-shortname\fR gives a string where every
path element is replaced with its short (8.3) version of the
name. This attribute cannot be set. \fB-system\fR gives or sets or
clears the value of the system attribute of the file.
-.PP
-On Macintosh, \fB-creator\fR gives or sets the Finder creator type of
-the file. \fB-hidden\fR gives or sets or clears the hidden attribute
-of the file. \fB-readonly\fR gives or sets or clears the readonly
-attribute of the file. Note that directories can only be locked if
-File Sharing is turned on. \fB-type\fR gives or sets the Finder file
-type for the file.
.RE
.VS
.TP
@@ -126,8 +119,8 @@ a \fB\-\fR.
\fBfile dirname \fIname\fR
Returns a name comprised of all of the path components in \fIname\fR
excluding the last element. If \fIname\fR is a relative file name and
-only contains one path element, then returns ``\fB.\fR'' (or ``\fB:\fR''
-on the Macintosh). If \fIname\fR refers to a root directory, then the
+only contains one path element, then returns ``\fB.\fR''.
+If \fIname\fR refers to a root directory, then the
root directory is returned. For example,
.RS
.CS
@@ -186,7 +179,7 @@ returns \fB/foo/bar\fR.
.PP
Note that any of the names can contain separators, and that the result
is always canonical for the current platform: \fB/\fR for Unix and
-Windows, and \fB:\fR for Macintosh.
+Windows.
.RE
.TP
\fBfile link ?\fI-linktype\fR? \fIlinkName\fR ?\fItarget\fR?
@@ -251,7 +244,7 @@ or set then an error is generated.
.
Returns the platform-specific name of the file. This is useful if the
filename is needed to pass to a platform-specific call, such as exec
-under Windows or AppleScript on the Macintosh.
+under Windows.
.TP
\fBfile normalize \fIname\fR
.
@@ -398,10 +391,7 @@ Returns a string giving the type of file \fIname\fR, which will be one of
\fBfile volumes\fR
.
Returns the absolute paths to the volumes mounted on the system, as a
-proper Tcl list. On the Macintosh, this will be a list of the mounted
-drives, both local and network. N.B. if two drives have the same name,
-they will both appear on the volume list, but there is currently no way,
-from Tcl, to access any but the first of these drives. On UNIX, the
+proper Tcl list. On UNIX, the
command will always return "/", since all filesystems are locally mounted.
On Windows, it will return a list of the available local drives
(e.g. {a:/ c:/}).
diff --git a/doc/filename.n b/doc/filename.n
index b588440..92d0eb7 100644
--- a/doc/filename.n
+++ b/doc/filename.n
@@ -42,61 +42,6 @@ type of a given path.
The rules for native names depend on the value reported in the Tcl
array element \fBtcl_platform(platform)\fR:
.TP 10
-\fBmac\fR
-On Apple Macintosh systems, Tcl supports two forms of path names. The
-normal Mac style names use colons as path separators. Paths may be
-relative or absolute, and file names may contain any character other
-than colon. A leading colon causes the rest of the path to be
-interpreted relative to the current directory. If a path contains a
-colon that is not at the beginning, then the path is interpreted as an
-absolute path. Sequences of two or more colons anywhere in the path
-are used to construct relative paths where \fB::\fR refers to the
-parent of the current directory, \fB:::\fR refers to the parent of the
-parent, and so forth.
-.RS
-.PP
-In addition to Macintosh style names, Tcl also supports a subset of
-Unix-like names. If a path contains no colons, then it is interpreted
-like a Unix path. Slash is used as the path separator. The file name
-\fB\&.\fR refers to the current directory, and \fB\&..\fR refers to the
-parent of the current directory. However, some names like \fB/\fR or
-\fB/..\fR have no mapping, and are interpreted as Macintosh names. In
-general, commands that generate file names will return Macintosh style
-names, but commands that accept file names will take both Macintosh
-and Unix-style names.
-.PP
-The following examples illustrate various forms of path names:
-.TP 15
-\fB:\fR
-Relative path to the current folder.
-.TP 15
-\fBMyFile\fR
-Relative path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR in the current folder.
-.TP 15
-\fBMyDisk:MyFile\fR
-Absolute path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR on the device named \fBMyDisk\fR.
-.TP 15
-\fB:MyDir:MyFile\fR
-Relative path to a file name \fBMyFile\fR in a folder named
-\fBMyDir\fR in the current folder.
-.TP 15
-\fB::MyFile\fR
-Relative path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR in the folder above the
-current folder.
-.TP 15
-\fB:::MyFile\fR
-Relative path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR in the folder two levels above the
-current folder.
-.TP 15
-\fB/MyDisk/MyFile\fR
-Absolute path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR on the device named
-\fBMyDisk\fR.
-.TP 15
-\fB\&../MyFile\fR
-Relative path to a file named \fBMyFile\fR in the folder above the
-current folder.
-.RE
-.TP
\fBunix\fR
On Unix platforms, Tcl uses path names where the components are
separated by slashes. Path names may be relative or absolute, and
@@ -182,7 +127,7 @@ characters between the tilde and the next separator are taken as a
user name, which is used to retrieve the user's home directory for
substitution.
.PP
-The Macintosh and Windows platforms do not support tilde substitution
+The Windows platform does not support tilde substitution
when a user name follows the tilde. On these platforms, attempts to
use a tilde followed by a user name will generate an error that the
user does not exist when Tcl attempts to interpret that part of the
diff --git a/doc/glob.n b/doc/glob.n
index 6f45d90..1a08c7a 100644
--- a/doc/glob.n
+++ b/doc/glob.n
@@ -83,13 +83,7 @@ a directory will be returned if \fB\-types d\fR was specified.
.PP
The second form specifies types where all the types given must match.
These are \fIr\fR, \fIw\fR, \fIx\fR as file permissions, and
-\fIreadonly\fR, \fIhidden\fR as special permission cases. On the
-Macintosh, MacOS types and creators are also supported, where any item
-which is four characters long is assumed to be a MacOS type
-(e.g. \fBTEXT\fR). Items which are of the form \fI{macintosh type XXXX}\fR
-or \fI{macintosh creator XXXX}\fR will match types or creators
-respectively. Unrecognized types, or specifications of multiple MacOS
-types/creators will signal an error.
+\fIreadonly\fR, \fIhidden\fR as special permission cases.
.PP
The two forms may be mixed, so \fB\-types {d f r w}\fR will find all
regular files OR directories that have both read AND write permissions.
@@ -184,13 +178,6 @@ interpreted as a wildcard character. One solution to this problem is
to use the Unix style forward slash as a path separator. Windows style
paths can be converted to Unix style paths with the command \fBfile
join $path\fR (or \fBfile normalize $path\fR in Tcl 8.4).
-.TP
-\fBMacintosh\fR
-.
-When using the options, \fB\-directory\fR, \fB\-join\fR or \fB\-path\fR, glob
-assumes the directory separator for the entire pattern is the standard
-``:''. When not using these options, glob examines each pattern argument
-and uses ``/'' unless the pattern contains a ``:''.
.SH EXAMPLES
Find all the Tcl files in the current directory:
.CS
diff --git a/doc/open.n b/doc/open.n
index 1557ca9..ae0bcbc 100644
--- a/doc/open.n
+++ b/doc/open.n
@@ -378,12 +378,6 @@ application, no data will be sent to the command pipeline's standard output
until the pipe is actually closed. This problem occurs because 16-bit DOS
applications are run synchronously, as described above.
.TP
-\fBMacintosh\fR
-Opening a serial port is not currently implemented under Macintosh.
-.sp
-Opening a command pipeline is not supported under Macintosh, since
-applications do not support the concept of standard input or output.
-.TP
\fBUnix\fR\0\0\0\0\0\0\0
Valid values for \fIfileName\fR to open a serial port are generally of the
form \fB/dev/tty\fIX\fR, where \fIX\fR is \fBa\fR or \fBb\fR, but the name
diff --git a/doc/puts.n b/doc/puts.n
index 9fa5f15..5c1c12c 100644
--- a/doc/puts.n
+++ b/doc/puts.n
@@ -37,8 +37,7 @@ Newline characters in the output are translated by \fBputs\fR to
platform-specific end-of-line sequences according to the current
value of the \fB\-translation\fR option for the channel (for example,
on PCs newlines are normally replaced with carriage-return-linefeed
-sequences; on Macintoshes newlines are normally replaced with
-carriage-returns).
+sequences).
See the \fBfconfigure\fR manual entry for a discussion on ways in
which \fBfconfigure\fR will alter output.
.PP
diff --git a/doc/resource.n b/doc/resource.n
deleted file mode 100644
index d8d2fbf..0000000
--- a/doc/resource.n
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,154 +0,0 @@
-'\"
-'\" Copyright (c) 1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
-'\"
-'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
-'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
-'\"
-.so man.macros
-.TH resource n 8.0 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands"
-.BS
-'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below!
-.SH NAME
-resource \- Manipulate Macintosh resources
-.SH SYNOPSIS
-\fBresource \fIoption\fR ?\fIarg arg ...\fR?
-.BE
-
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-.PP
-The \fBresource\fR command provides some generic operations for
-dealing with Macintosh resources. This command is only supported on
-the Macintosh platform. Each Macintosh file consists of two
-\fIforks\fR: a \fIdata\fR fork and a \fIresource\fR fork. You use the
-normal open, puts, close, etc. commands to manipulate the data fork.
-You must use this command, however, to interact with the resource
-fork. \fIOption\fR indicates what resource command to perform. Any
-unique abbreviation for \fIoption\fR is acceptable. The valid options
-are:
-.TP
-\fBresource close \fIrsrcRef\fR
-Closes the given resource reference (obtained from \fBresource
-open\fR). Resources from that resource file will no longer be
-available.
-.TP
-\fBresource delete\fR ?\fIoptions\fR? \fIresourceType\fR
-This command will delete the resource specified by \fIoptions\fR and
-type \fIresourceType\fR (see RESOURCE TYPES below). The options
-give you several ways to specify the resource to be deleted.
-.RS
-.TP
-\fB\-id\fR \fIresourceId\fR
-If the \fB-id\fR option is given the id \fIresourceId\fR (see RESOURCE
-IDS below) is used to specify the resource to be deleted. The id must
-be a number - to specify a name use the \fB\-name\fR option.
-.TP
-\fB\-name\fR \fIresourceName\fR
-If \fB-name\fR is specified, the resource named
-\fIresourceName\fR will be deleted. If the \fB-id\fR is also
-provided, then there must be a resource with BOTH this name and
-this id. If no name is provided, then the id will be used regardless
-of the name of the actual resource.
-.TP
-\fB\-file\fR \fIresourceRef\fR
-If the \fB-file\fR option is specified then the resource will be
-deleted from the file pointed to by \fIresourceRef\fR. Otherwise the
-first resource with the given \fIresourceName\fR and or
-\fIresourceId\fR which is found on the resource file path will be
-deleted. To inspect the file path, use the \fIresource files\fR command.
-.RE
-.TP
-\fBresource files ?\fIresourceRef\fR?
-If \fIresourceRef\fRis not provided, this command returns a Tcl list
-of the resource references for all the currently open resource files.
-The list is in the normal Macintosh search order for resources. If
-\fIresourceRef\fR is specified, the command will
-return the path to the file whose resource fork is represented by that
-token.
-.TP
-\fBresource list \fIresourceType\fR ?\fIresourceRef\fR?
-List all of the resources ids of type \fIresourceType\fR (see RESOURCE
-TYPES below). If \fIresourceRef\fR is specified then the command will
-limit the search to that particular resource file. Otherwise, all
-resource files currently opened by the application will be searched.
-A Tcl list of either the resource name's or resource id's of the found
-resources will be returned. See the RESOURCE IDS section below for
-more details about what a resource id is.
-.TP
-\fBresource open \fIfileName\fR ?\fIaccess\fR?
-Open the resource for the file \fIfileName\fR. Standard file access
-permissions may also be specified (see the manual entry for \fBopen\fR
-for details). A resource reference (\fIresourceRef\fR) is returned
-that can be used by the other resource commands. An error can occur
-if the file doesn't exist or the file does not have a resource fork.
-However, if you open the file with write permissions the file and/or
-resource fork will be created instead of generating an error.
-.TP
-\fBresource read \fIresourceType\fR \fIresourceId\fR ?\fIresourceRef\fR?
-Read the entire resource of type \fIresourceType\fR (see RESOURCE
-TYPES below) and the name or id of \fIresourceId\fR (see RESOURCE IDS
-below) into memory and return the result. If \fIresourceRef\fR is
-specified we limit our search to that resource file, otherwise we
-search all open resource forks in the application. It is important to
-note that most Macintosh resource use a binary format and the data
-returned from this command may have embedded NULLs or other non-ASCII
-data.
-.TP
-\fBresource types ?\fIresourceRef\fR?
-This command returns a Tcl list of all resource types (see RESOURCE
-TYPES below) found in the resource file pointed to by
-\fIresourceRef\fR. If \fIresourceRef\fR is not specified it will
-return all the resource types found in every resource file currently
-opened by the application.
-.TP
-\fBresource write\fR ?\fIoptions\fR? \fIresourceType\fR \fIdata\fR
-This command will write the passed in \fIdata\fR as a new resource of
-type \fIresourceType\fR (see RESOURCE TYPES below). Several options
-are available that describe where and how the resource is stored.
-.RS
-.TP
-\fB\-id\fR \fIresourceId\fR
-If the \fB-id\fR option is given the id \fIresourceId\fR (see RESOURCE
-IDS below) is used for the new resource, otherwise a unique id will be
-generated that will not conflict with any existing resource. However,
-the id must be a number - to specify a name use the \fB\-name\fR option.
-.TP
-\fB\-name\fR \fIresourceName\fR
-If \fB-name\fR is specified the resource will be named
-\fIresourceName\fR, otherwise it will have the empty string as the
-name.
-.TP
-\fB\-file\fR \fIresourceRef\fR
-If the \fB-file\fR option is specified then the resource will be
-written in the file pointed to by \fIresourceRef\fR, otherwise the
-most recently open resource will be used.
-.TP
-\fB\-force\fR
-If the target resource already exists, then by default Tcl will not
-overwrite it, but raise an error instead. Use the -force flag to
-force overwriting the extant resource.
-.RE
-
-.SH "RESOURCE TYPES"
-Resource types are defined as a four character string that is then
-mapped to an underlying id. For example, \fBTEXT\fR refers to the
-Macintosh resource type for text. The type \fBSTR#\fR is a list of
-counted strings. All Macintosh resources must be of some type. See
-Macintosh documentation for a more complete list of resource types
-that are commonly used.
-
-.SH "RESOURCE IDS"
-For this command the notion of a resource id actually refers to two
-ideas in Macintosh resources. Every place you can use a resource Id
-you can use either the resource name or a resource number. Names are
-always searched or returned in preference to numbers. For example,
-the \fBresource list\fR command will return names if they exist or
-numbers if the name is NULL.
-
-.SH "PORTABILITY ISSUES"
-The resource command is only available on Macintosh.
-
-.SH "SEE ALSO"
-open(n)
-
-.SH KEYWORDS
-open, resource
diff --git a/doc/source.n b/doc/source.n
index 18004a8..c60c86e 100644
--- a/doc/source.n
+++ b/doc/source.n
@@ -40,14 +40,6 @@ If you require a ``^Z'' in code for string comparison, you can use
``\\032'' or ``\\u001a'', which will be safely substituted by the Tcl
interpreter into ``^Z''.
.VE 8.4
-.PP
-The \fI\-rsrc\fR and \fI\-rsrcid\fR forms of this command are only
-available on Macintosh computers. These versions of the command
-allow you to source a script from a \fBTEXT\fR resource. You may specify
-what \fBTEXT\fR resource to source by either name or id. By default Tcl
-searches all open resource files, which include the current
-application and any loaded C extensions. Alternatively, you may
-specify the \fIfileName\fR where the \fBTEXT\fR resource can be found.
.SH EXAMPLE
Run the script in the file \fBfoo.tcl\fR and then the script in the
file \fBbar.tcl\fR:
diff --git a/doc/tclvars.n b/doc/tclvars.n
index d097a92..b4cf9e2 100644
--- a/doc/tclvars.n
+++ b/doc/tclvars.n
@@ -45,65 +45,6 @@ Tcl are left unmodified. Setting an env array variable to blank is the
same as unsetting it as this is the behavior of the underlying Windows OS.
It should be noted that relying on an existing and empty environment variable
won't work on windows and is discouraged for cross-platform usage.
-.VE
-.RE
-.RS
-On the Macintosh, the environment variable is constructed by Tcl as no
-global environment variable exists. The environment variables that
-are created for Tcl include:
-.TP
-\fBLOGIN\fR
-This holds the Chooser name of the Macintosh.
-.TP
-\fBUSER\fR
-This also holds the Chooser name of the Macintosh.
-.TP
-\fBSYS_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the system directory.
-.TP
-\fBAPPLE_M_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the Apple Menu directory.
-.TP
-\fBCP_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the control panels directory.
-.TP
-\fBDESK_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the desk top directory.
-.TP
-\fBEXT_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the system extensions directory.
-.TP
-\fBPREF_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the preferences directory.
-.TP
-\fBPRINT_MON_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the print monitor directory.
-.TP
-\fBSHARED_TRASH_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the network trash directory.
-.TP
-\fBTRASH_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the trash directory.
-.TP
-\fBSTART_UP_FOLDER\fR
-The path to the start up directory.
-.TP
-\fBHOME\fR
-The path to the application's default directory.
-.PP
-You can also create your own environment variables for the Macintosh.
-A file named \fITcl Environment Variables\fR may be placed in the
-preferences folder in the Mac system folder. Each line of this file
-should be of the form \fIVAR_NAME=var_data\fR.
-.PP
-The last alternative is to place environment variables in a 'STR#'
-resource named \fITcl Environment Variables\fR of the application. This
-is considered a little more ``Mac like'' than a Unix style Environment
-Variable file. Each entry in the 'STR#' resource has the same format
-as above. The source code file \fItclMacEnv.c\fR contains the
-implementation of the env mechanisms. This file contains many
-#define's that allow customization of the env mechanisms to fit your
-applications needs.
.RE
.TP
\fBerrorCode\fR
@@ -279,7 +220,7 @@ Windows 95, the version will be 4.0; on Windows 98, the version will
be 4.10.
.TP
\fBplatform\fR
-Either \fBwindows\fR, \fBmacintosh\fR, or \fBunix\fR. This identifies the
+Either \fBwindows\fR or \fBunix\fR. This identifies the
general operating environment of the machine.
.TP
\fBthreaded\fR
@@ -290,7 +231,7 @@ was compiled with threads enabled.
This identifies the
current user based on the login information available on the platform.
This comes from the USER or LOGNAME environment variable on Unix,
-and the value from GetUserName on Windows and Macintosh.
+and the value from GetUserName on Windows.
.TP
\fBwordSize\fR
.VS 8.4
@@ -326,15 +267,6 @@ of this file and \fBsource\fR it if it exists. For example, for \fBwish\fR
the variable is set to \fB~/.wishrc\fR for Unix and \fB~/wishrc.tcl\fR
for Windows.
.TP
-\fBtcl_rcRsrcName\fR
-This variable is only used on Macintosh systems. The variable is used
-during initialization to indicate the name of a user-specific
-\fBTEXT\fR resource located in the application or extension resource
-forks. If it is set by application-specific initialization, then the
-Tcl startup code will check for the existence of this resource and
-\fBsource\fR it if it exists. For example, the Macintosh \fBwish\fR
-application has the variable is set to \fBtclshrc\fR.
-.TP
\fBtcl_traceCompile\fR
The value of this variable can be set to control
how much tracing information