Scripts are much more useful if they can be called with different values in the command line.
For instance, a script that extracts a particular value from a file could be written so that it prompts for a file name, reads the file name, and then extracts the data. Or, it could be written to loop through as many files as are in the command line, and extract the data from each file, and print the file name and data.
The second method of writing the program can easily be used from other scripts. This makes it more useful.
The number of command line arguments to a Tcl script is passed
as the global variable argc
. The
name of a Tcl script is passed to the script as the global
variable argv0
, and the rest of
the command line arguments are passed as a list in argv
. The name of the executable that
runs the script, such as tclsh
is
given by the command info nameofexecutable
Another method of passing information to a script is with
environment variables. For instance, suppose
you are writing a program in which a user provides some sort of
comment to go into a record. It would be friendly to allow the
user to edit their comments in their favorite editor. If the
user has defined an EDITOR
environment variable, then you can invoke that editor for them
to use.
Environment variables are available to Tcl scripts in a global
associative array env
. The index
into env
is the name of the
environment variable. The command
puts "$env(PATH)"
would print the contents of
the PATH
environment variable.
puts "There are $argc arguments to this script" puts "The name of this script is $argv0" if {$argc > 0} {puts "The other arguments are: $argv" } puts "You have these environment variables set:" foreach index [array names env] { puts "$index: $env($index)" }