proc(3tcl)


NAME

   proc - Create a Tcl procedure

SYNOPSIS

   proc name args body
______________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

   The  proc command creates a new Tcl procedure named name, replacing any
   existing command or  procedure  there  may  have  been  by  that  name.
   Whenever  the  new  command  is  invoked,  the contents of body will be
   executed by the Tcl interpreter.  Normally, name is  unqualified  (does
   not  include  the  names  of  any  containing  namespaces), and the new
   procedure is created in the current namespace.  If  name  includes  any
   namespace  qualifiers,  the  procedure  is  created  in  the  specified
   namespace.  Args specifies the formal arguments to the  procedure.   It
   consists  of  a  list, possibly empty, each of whose elements specifies
   one argument.  Each argument specifier is also a list with  either  one
   or  two  fields.  If there is only a single field in the specifier then
   it is the name of the argument; if there are two fields, then the first
   is  the  argument  name and the second is its default value.  Arguments
   with default values that are followed by non-defaulted arguments become
   required arguments.  In 8.6 this will be considered an error.

   When  name  is invoked a local variable will be created for each of the
   formal arguments to the procedure; its  value  will  be  the  value  of
   corresponding  argument  in  the  invoking  command  or  the argument's
   default value.  Actual  arguments  are  assigned  to  formal  arguments
   strictly in order.  Arguments with default values need not be specified
   in a procedure  invocation.   However,  there  must  be  enough  actual
   arguments  for  all the formal arguments that do not have defaults, and
   there must not be any extra actual arguments.  Arguments  with  default
   values  that  are  followed  by non-defaulted arguments become required
   arguments (in 8.6 it will  be  considered  an  error).   There  is  one
   special  case  to permit procedures with variable numbers of arguments.
   If the last formal argument has the name  args,  then  a  call  to  the
   procedure  may  contain  more  actual  arguments than the procedure has
   formals.  In this case, all of the actual arguments starting at the one
   that would be assigned to args are combined into a list (as if the list
   command had been used); this combined value is assigned  to  the  local
   variable args.

   When  body  is  being  executed, variable names normally refer to local
   variables, which are created automatically when referenced and  deleted
   when  the  procedure  returns.   One  local  variable  is automatically
   created for each of the procedure's  arguments.   Other  variables  can
   only  be  accessed  by  invoking  one of the global, variable, upvar or
   namespace upvar commands.

   The proc command returns an empty string.  When a procedure is invoked,
   the  procedure's  return  value  is  the  value  specified  in a return
   command.  If the procedure does not execute an  explicit  return,  then
   its  return  value  is  the  value  of the last command executed in the
   procedure's body.  If an error occurs  while  executing  the  procedure
   body, then the procedure-as-a-whole will return that same error.

EXAMPLES

   This  is a procedure that accepts arbitrarily many arguments and prints
   them out, one by one.
          proc printArguments args {
             foreach arg $args {
                puts $arg
             }
          }

   This procedure is a bit like the incr command, except it multiplies the
   contents of the named variable by the value, which defaults to 2:
          proc mult {varName {multiplier 2}} {
             upvar 1 $varName var
             set var [expr {$var * $multiplier}]
          }

SEE ALSO

   info(3tcl), unknown(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

   argument, procedure





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