'\" '\" Copyright (c) 1989-1993 The Regents of the University of California. '\" Copyright (c) 1994-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. '\" '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. '\" '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: RecordEval.3,v 1.6 2004/10/07 14:44:33 dkf Exp $ '\" .so man.macros .TH Tcl_RecordAndEval 3 7.4 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" .BS .SH NAME Tcl_RecordAndEval \- save command on history list before evaluating .SH SYNOPSIS .nf \fB#include \fR .sp int \fBTcl_RecordAndEval\fR(\fIinterp, cmd, flags\fR) .SH ARGUMENTS .AS Tcl_Interp *interp .AP Tcl_Interp *interp in Tcl interpreter in which to evaluate command. .AP "CONST char" *cmd in Command (or sequence of commands) to execute. .AP int flags in An OR'ed combination of flag bits. \fBTCL_NO_EVAL\fR means record the command but don't evaluate it. \fBTCL_EVAL_GLOBAL\fR means evaluate the command at global level instead of the current stack level. .BE .SH DESCRIPTION .PP \fBTcl_RecordAndEval\fR is invoked to record a command as an event on the history list and then execute it using \fBTcl_Eval\fR (or \fBTcl_GlobalEval\fR if the \fBTCL_EVAL_GLOBAL\fR bit is set in \fIflags\fR). It returns a completion code such as \fBTCL_OK\fR just like \fBTcl_Eval\fR and it leaves information in the interpreter's result. If you don't want the command recorded on the history list then you should invoke \fBTcl_Eval\fR instead of \fBTcl_RecordAndEval\fR. Normally \fBTcl_RecordAndEval\fR is only called with top-level commands typed by the user, since the purpose of history is to allow the user to re-issue recently-invoked commands. If the \fIflags\fR argument contains the \fBTCL_NO_EVAL\fR bit then the command is recorded without being evaluated. .PP Note that \fBTcl_RecordAndEval\fR has been largely replaced by the object-based procedure \fBTcl_RecordAndEvalObj\fR. That object-based procedure records and optionally executes a command held in a Tcl object instead of a string. .SH "SEE ALSO" Tcl_RecordAndEvalObj .SH KEYWORDS command, event, execute, history, interpreter, record