ExprLong man page on SunOS

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Tcl_ExprLong(3)		    Tcl Library Procedures	       Tcl_ExprLong(3)

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME
       Tcl_ExprLong,  Tcl_ExprDouble, Tcl_ExprBoolean, Tcl_ExprString - evalu‐
       ate an expression

SYNOPSIS
       #include <tcl.h>

       int
       Tcl_ExprLong(interp, string, longPtr)

       int
       Tcl_ExprDouble(interp, string, doublePtr)

       int
       Tcl_ExprBoolean(interp, string, booleanPtr)

       int
       Tcl_ExprString(interp, string)

ARGUMENTS
       Tcl_Interp   *interp	  (in)	    Interpreter in  whose  context  to
					    evaluate string or objPtr.

       char	    *string	  (in)	    Expression	to be evaluated.  Must
					    be in writable memory (the expres‐
					    sion  parser makes temporary modi‐
					    fications  to  the	string	during
					    parsing,  which  it	 undoes before
					    returning).

       long	    *longPtr	  (out)	    Pointer to location	 in  which  to
					    store  the	integer	 value	of the
					    expression.

       int	    *doublePtr	  (out)	    Pointer to location	 in  which  to
					    store  the floating-point value of
					    the expression.

       int	    *booleanPtr	  (out)	    Pointer to location	 in  which  to
					    store the 0/1 boolean value of the
					    expression.
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION
       These four procedures all evaluate the expression given by  the	string
       argument	 and  return  the  result in one of four different forms.  The
       expression can have any of the forms  accepted  by  the	expr  command.
       Note  that  these  procedures have been largely replaced by the object-
       based   procedures   Tcl_ExprLongObj,   Tcl_ExprDoubleObj,    Tcl_Expr‐
       BooleanObj, and Tcl_ExprStringObj.  Those object-based procedures eval‐
       uate an expression held in a Tcl	 object	 instead  of  a	 string.   The
       object  argument	 can  retain  an  internal representation that is more
       efficient to execute.

       The interp argument refers to  an  interpreter  used  to	 evaluate  the
       expression  (e.g.  for variables and nested Tcl commands) and to return
       error information.

       For all of these procedures the return value is a standard Tcl  result:
       TCL_OK  means  the expression was successfully evaluated, and TCL_ERROR
       means that an error  occurred  while  evaluating	 the  expression.   If
       TCL_ERROR is returned then the interpreter's result will hold a message
       describing the error.  If an error occurs while executing a Tcl command
       embedded in the expression then that error will be returned.

       If the expression is successfully evaluated, then its value is returned
       in one  of  four	 forms,	 depending  on	which  procedure  is  invoked.
       Tcl_ExprLong  stores an integer value at *longPtr.  If the expression's
       actual value is a floating-point number, then it	 is  truncated	to  an
       integer.	 If the expression's actual value is a non-numeric string then
       an error is returned.

       Tcl_ExprDouble stores a floating-point value  at	 *doublePtr.   If  the
       expression's  actual  value is an integer, it is converted to floating-
       point.  If the expression's actual value is a non-numeric  string  then
       an error is returned.

       Tcl_ExprBoolean	stores	a  0/1	integer	 value at *booleanPtr.	If the
       expression's actual value is an integer or floating-point number,  then
       they  store 0 at *booleanPtr if the value was zero and 1 otherwise.  If
       the expression's actual value is a non-numeric string then it  must  be
       one of the values accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean such as ``yes'' or ``no'',
       or else an error occurs.

       Tcl_ExprString returns the value of the expression as a	string	stored
       in  the	interpreter's  result.	If the expression's actual value is an
       integer then Tcl_ExprString converts it to a string using sprintf  with
       a  ``%d''  converter.   If the expression's actual value is a floating-
       point number, then Tcl_ExprString calls Tcl_PrintDouble to  convert  it
       to a string.

SEE ALSO
       Tcl_ExprLongObj, Tcl_ExprDoubleObj, Tcl_ExprBooleanObj, Tcl_ExprObj

KEYWORDS
       boolean, double, evaluate, expression, integer, object, string

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
       │  ATTRIBUTE TYPE    │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
       ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
       │Availability	    │ SUNWTcl	      │
       ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability │ External	      │
       └────────────────────┴─────────────────┘
NOTES
       Source for Tcl is available in the SUNWTclS package.

Tcl				      7.0		       Tcl_ExprLong(3)
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