Procedures

   

Practical Programming in Tcl & Tk, Third Edition
By Brent B. Welch

Table of Contents
Chapter 1.  Tcl Fundamentals


Tcl uses the proc command to define procedures. Once defined, a Tcl procedure is used just like any of the other built-in Tcl commands. The basic syntax to define a procedure is:

 proc name arglist body 

The first argument is the name of the procedure being defined. The second argument is a list of parameters to the procedure. The third argument is a command body that is one or more Tcl commands.

The procedure name is case sensitive, and in fact it can contain any characters. Procedure names and variable names do not conflict with each other. As a convention, this book begins procedure names with uppercase letters and it begins variable names with lowercase letters. Good programming style is important as your Tcl scripts get larger. Tcl coding style is discussed in Chapter 12.

Example 1-12 Defining a procedure.
 proc Diag {a b} {    set c [expr sqrt($a * $a + $b * $b)]    return $c } puts "The diagonal of a 3, 4 right triangle is [Diag 3 4]" => The diagonal of a 3, 4 right triangle is 5.0 

The Diag procedure defined in the example computes the length of the diagonal side of a right triangle given the lengths of the other two sides. The sqrt function is one of many math functions supported by the expr command. The variable c is local to the procedure; it is defined only during execution of Diag. Variable scope is discussed further in Chapter 7. It is not really necessary to use the variable c in this example. The procedure can also be written as:

 proc Diag {a b} {     return [expr sqrt($a * $a + $b * $b)] } 

The return command is used to return the result of the procedure. The return command is optional in this example because the Tcl interpreter returns the value of the last command in the body as the value of the procedure. So, the procedure could be reduced to:

 proc Diag {a b} {     expr sqrt($a * $a + $b * $b) } 

Note the stylized use of curly braces in the example. The curly brace at the end of the first line starts the third argument to proc, which is the command body. In this case, the Tcl interpreter sees the opening left brace, causing it to ignore newline characters and scan the text until a matching right brace is found. Double quotes have the same property. They group characters, including newlines, until another double quote is found. The result of the grouping is that the third argument to proc is a sequence of commands. When they are evaluated later, the embedded newlines will terminate each command.

The other crucial effect of the curly braces around the procedure body is to delay any substitutions in the body until the time the procedure is called. For example, the variables a, b, and c are not defined until the procedure is called, so we do not want to do variable substitution at the time Diag is defined.

The proc command supports additional features such as having variable numbers of arguments and default values for arguments. These are described in detail in Chapter 7.


       
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    Practical Programming in Tcl and Tk
    Practical Programming in Tcl and Tk (4th Edition)
    ISBN: 0130385603
    EAN: 2147483647
    Year: 1999
    Pages: 478

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