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Tcl(n)			     Tcl Built-In Commands			Tcl(n)

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME
       Tcl - Summary of Tcl language syntax.
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION
       The  following  rules  define  the syntax and semantics of the Tcl lan‐
       guage:

       [1]    A Tcl script is a string containing one or more commands.	 Semi-
	      colons  and  newlines  are  command  separators unless quoted as
	      described below.	Close brackets are command terminators	during
	      command substitution (see below) unless quoted.

       [2]    A command is evaluated in two steps.  First, the Tcl interpreter
	      breaks the command into  words  and  performs  substitutions  as
	      described	 below.	 These substitutions are performed in the same
	      way for all commands.  The first word is used to locate  a  com‐
	      mand  procedure  to carry out the command, then all of the words
	      of the command are passed to the command procedure.  The command
	      procedure	 is  free to interpret each of its words in any way it
	      likes, such as an integer, variable name, list, or  Tcl  script.
	      Different commands interpret their words differently.

       [3]    Words of a command are separated by white space (except for new‐
	      lines, which are command separators).

       [4]    If the first character of a word is  double-quote	 (``"'')  then
	      the  word	 is terminated by the next double-quote character.  If
	      semi-colons, close brackets, or white space characters  (includ‐
	      ing newlines) appear between the quotes then they are treated as
	      ordinary characters and included in the word.  Command substitu‐
	      tion, variable substitution, and backslash substitution are per‐
	      formed on the characters between the quotes as described	below.
	      The double-quotes are not retained as part of the word.

       [5]    If  the  first character of a word is an open brace (``{'') then
	      the word is terminated by	 the  matching	close  brace  (``}'').
	      Braces  nest  within  the	 word:	for each additional open brace
	      there must be an additional close brace  (however,  if  an  open
	      brace  or close brace within the word is quoted with a backslash
	      then it is not counted in locating the  matching	close  brace).
	      No  substitutions	 are  performed	 on the characters between the
	      braces  except  for  backslash-newline  substitutions  described
	      below,  nor  do  semi-colons, newlines, close brackets, or white
	      space receive any special interpretation.	 The word will consist
	      of  exactly the characters between the outer braces, not includ‐
	      ing the braces themselves.

       [6]    If a word contains an open bracket  (``['')  then	 Tcl  performs
	      command substitution.  To do this it invokes the Tcl interpreter
	      recursively to process the characters following the open bracket
	      as  a Tcl script.	 The script may contain any number of commands
	      and must be terminated by a close bracket (``]'').   The	result
	      of  the  script (i.e. the result of its last command) is substi‐
	      tuted into the word in place of the  brackets  and  all  of  the
	      characters  between  them.   There  may be any number of command
	      substitutions in a single word.	Command	 substitution  is  not
	      performed on words enclosed in braces.

       [7]    If a word contains a dollar-sign (``$'') then Tcl performs vari‐
	      able substitution:  the dollar-sign and the following characters
	      are  replaced  in the word by the value of a variable.  Variable
	      substitution may take any of the following forms:

	      $name	     Name is the name of a scalar variable;  the  name
			     is	 terminated by any character that isn't a let‐
			     ter, digit, or underscore.

	      $name(index)   Name gives the name  of  an  array	 variable  and
			     index  gives  the	name of an element within that
			     array.  Name must contain only  letters,  digits,
			     and underscores.  Command substitutions, variable
			     substitutions, and	 backslash  substitutions  are
			     performed on the characters of index.

	      ${name}	     Name  is  the  name of a scalar variable.	It may
			     contain  any  characters  whatsoever  except  for
			     close braces.

	      There  may  be  any number of variable substitutions in a single
	      word.  Variable substitution is not performed on words  enclosed
	      in braces.

       [8]    If a backslash (``\'') appears within a word then backslash sub‐
	      stitution occurs.	 In all cases but those	 described  below  the
	      backslash	 is  dropped and the following character is treated as
	      an ordinary character and included in  the  word.	  This	allows
	      characters  such	as  double  quotes, close brackets, and dollar
	      signs to be included in words without  triggering	 special  pro‐
	      cessing.	The following table lists the backslash sequences that
	      are handled specially, along with the value that	replaces  each
	      sequence.

	      \a     Audible alert (bell) (0x7).

	      \b     Backspace (0x8).

	      \f     Form feed (0xc).

	      \n     Newline (0xa).

	      \r     Carriage-return (0xd).

	      \t     Tab (0x9).

	      \v     Vertical tab (0xb).

	      \<newline>whiteSpace
		     A single space character replaces the backslash, newline,
		     and all spaces and tabs after the	newline.   This	 back‐
		     slash sequence is unique in that it is replaced in a sep‐
		     arate pre-pass before the	command	 is  actually  parsed.
		     This  means  that it will be replaced even when it occurs
		     between braces, and the resulting space will  be  treated
		     as a word separator if it isn't in braces or quotes.

	      \\     Backslash (``\'').

	      \ooo							       │
		     The  digits  ooo  (one,  two,  or	three of them) give an │
		     eight-bit octal value for the Unicode character that will │
		     be	 inserted.   The  upper	 bits of the Unicode character │
		     will be 0.						       │

	      \xhh							       │
		     The hexadecimal digits hh give an	eight-bit  hexadecimal │
		     value  for	 the  Unicode character that will be inserted. │
		     Any number of hexadecimal digits may be present; however, │
		     all  but the last two are ignored (the result is always a │
		     one-byte quantity).  The upper bits of the Unicode	 char‐ │
		     acter will be 0.					       │

	      \uhhhh							       │
		     The  hexadecimal digits hhhh (one, two, three, or four of │
		     them) give a sixteen-bit hexadecimal value for  the  Uni‐ │
		     code character that will be inserted.

	      Backslash	 substitution  is  not	performed on words enclosed in
	      braces, except for backslash-newline as described above.

       [9]    If a hash character (``#'') appears at  a	 point	where  Tcl  is
	      expecting	 the  first  character of the first word of a command,
	      then the hash character and the characters that  follow  it,  up
	      through  the next newline, are treated as a comment and ignored.
	      The comment character only has significance when it  appears  at
	      the beginning of a command.

       [10]   Each  character is processed exactly once by the Tcl interpreter
	      as part of creating the words of a  command.   For  example,  if
	      variable	substitution  occurs then no further substitutions are
	      performed on the value of the variable;  the value  is  inserted
	      into the word verbatim.  If command substitution occurs then the
	      nested command is processed entirely by the  recursive  call  to
	      the  Tcl interpreter; no substitutions are performed before mak‐
	      ing the recursive call and no additional substitutions are  per‐
	      formed on the result of the nested script.

       [11]   Substitutions  do	 not  affect the word boundaries of a command.
	      For example, during variable substitution the  entire  value  of
	      the  variable  becomes  part of a single word, even if the vari‐
	      able's value contains spaces.

Tcl				      8.1				Tcl(n)
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