Book Image

Tcl/Tk 8.5 Programming Cookbook

Book Image

Tcl/Tk 8.5 Programming Cookbook

Overview of this book

With Tcl/Tk, you can create full-featured cross-platform applications in a simple and easy-to-understand way without any expensive development package; the only tools required are a simple text editor and your imagination. This practical cookbook will help you to efficiently interact with editors, debuggers, and shell type interactive programs using Tcl/Tk 8. This cookbook will comprehensively guide you through practical implementation of Tcl/Tk 8.5 commands and tools. This book will take you through all the steps needed to become a productive programmer in Tcl/Tk 8. Right from guiding you through the basics to creating a stand-alone application, it provides complete explanation of all the steps along with handy tips and tricks. The book begins with an introduction to the Tcl shell, syntax, variables, and programming best practices in the language. It then explores procedures and the flow of events with control constructs followed by advanced error trapping and recovery. From Chapter 4, a detailed study of string expressions and handling enables you to handle various string functions and use lists to expand the string functionality. The book then discusses in-depth the Tcl Dictionary and how to utilize it to store and retrieve data. File operations and Tk GUI handling are covered extensively along with a developing a real-world address book application to practice the concepts learned.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Tcl/Tk 8.5 Programming Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgment
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Continuing a procedure


While the continue keyword is not a control construct in itself, it allows you to affect the control flow.

How to do it…

In the following recipe, we will create a Tcl script, to be called from the command line, that increments the value of x and prints out the value as in the for command recipe. However, the output will be skipped when x is equal to 5.

Create a text file named continue.tcl that contains the following commands.

Please note that within the comparison used to invoke the continue keyword, I have added a blank line for clarification. This is not needed for the continue statement but does make the output more legible as well as illustrating the usage of conditional check to perform additional actions.

for {set x 1} {$x < 11} {incr x} {
if {$x == 5} {
puts " "
continue
}
puts "x = $x"
}

Now invoke the script using the following command line:

% tclsh85 continue.tcl
x = 1
x = 2
x = 3
x = 4
x = 6
x = 7
x = 8
x = 9
x = 10

How it works…

The action was invoked 10...