Tcl Library Procedures

NAME

Tcl_ListObjAppendList, Tcl_ListObjAppendElement, Tcl_NewListObj, Tcl_ListObjGetElements, Tcl_ListObjLength, Tcl_ListObjIndex, Tcl_ListObjReplace - manipulate Tcl list objects

SYNOPSIS

#include <tcl.h>

int
Tcl_ListObjAppendList(interp, listPtr, elemListPtr)

int
Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(interp, listPtr, objPtr)

Tcl_Obj *
Tcl_NewListObj(objc, objv)

int
Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, listPtr, objcPtr, objvPtr)

int
Tcl_ListObjLength(interp, listPtr, intPtr)

int
Tcl_ListObjIndex(interp, listPtr, index, objPtrPtr)

int
Tcl_ListObjReplace(interp, listPtr, first, count, objc, objv)

ARGUMENTS

Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
If an error occurs while converting an object to be a list object, an error message is left in interp->objResult unless interp is NULL.

Tcl_Obj *listPtr (in/out)
Points to the list object to be manipulated. If listPtr does not already point to a list object, an attempt will be made to convert it to one.

Tcl_Obj *elemListPtr (in/out)
For Tcl_ListObjAppendList, this points to a list object containing elements to be appended onto listPtr. Each element of *elemListPtr will become a new element of listPtr. If *elemListPtr is not NULL and does not already point to a list object, an attempt will be made to convert it to one.

Tcl_Obj *objPtr (in)
Points to the Tcl object that Tcl_ListObjAppendElement will append to listPtr.

int *objcPtr (in)
Points to location where Tcl_ListObjGetElements stores the number of element objects in listPtr.

Tcl_Obj ***objvPtr (in)
Points to location where Tcl_ListObjGetElements stores a pointer to an array of pointers to the element objects in listPtr.

int objc (in)
For Tcl_NewListObj, this is the number of Tcl objects it will insert into a new list object. For Tcl_ListObjReplace, this is the number of Tcl objects it will insert into listPtr.

Tcl_Obj **objv (in)
Points to an array of pointers to objects. Tcl_NewListObj will insert these objects into a new list object and Tcl_ListObjReplace will insert them into listPtr. Each object will become a separate list element.

int *intPtr (out)
Points to location where Tcl_ListObjLength stores the length of the list.

int index (in)
Index of the list element that Tcl_ListObjIndex is to return. The first element has index 0.

Tcl_Obj **objPtrPtr (out)
Points to place where Tcl_ListObjIndex is to store a pointer to the resulting list element object.

int first (in)
Index of the starting list element that Tcl_ListObjReplace is to replace. The list's first element has index 0.

int last (in)
Index of the final list element that Tcl_ListObjReplace is to replace.

DESCRIPTION

Tcl list objects have an internal representation that supports the efficient indexing and appending. The procedures described in this man page are used to create, modify, index, and append to Tcl list objects from C code. In addition to these procedures, another common way to create a list object is to use Tcl_NewStringObj; the resulting object can be passed to a procedure expecting a list object where it will be converted to a list.

Tcl_ListObjAppendList and Tcl_ListObjAppendElement both add one or more objects to the end of the list object referenced by listPtr. Tcl_ListObjAppendList appends each element of the list object referenced by elemListPtr while Tcl_ListObjAppendElement appends the single object referenced by objPtr. Both procedures will convert the object referenced by listPtr to a list object if necessary. If an error occurs during conversion, both procedures return TCL_ERROR and leave an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. Similarly, if elemListPtr does not already refer to a list object, Tcl_ListObjAppendList will attempt to convert it to one and if an error occurs during conversion, will return TCL_ERROR and leave an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. An error message object in interp->objResult can be retrieved using Tcl_GetObjResult. Both procedures invalidate any old string representation of listPtr and, if it was converted to a list object, free any old internal representation. Similarly, Tcl_ListObjAppendList frees any old internal representation of elemListPtr if it converts it to a list object. After appending each element in elemListPtr, Tcl_ListObjAppendList increments the element's reference count since listPtr now also refers to it. For the same reason, Tcl_ListObjAppendElement increments objPtr's reference count. If no error occurs, the two procedures return TCL_OK after appending the objects.

Tcl_NewListObj returns a new list object created from the objc elements of the array referenced by objv where each element is a pointer to a Tcl object. If objc is less than or equal to zero, it returns an empty list object. The new list object's string representation is left invalid. Tcl_NewListObj increments the reference counts of the elements in objc since the new list now refers to them. The resulting new list object has reference count 1.

Tcl_ListObjGetElements returns a count and a pointer to an array of the elements in a list object. It returns the count by storing it in the address objcPtr. Similarly, it returns the array pointer by storing it in the address objvPtr. If listPtr is not already a list object, Tcl_ListObjGetElements will attempt to convert it to one; if the conversion fails, it returns TCL_ERROR and leaves an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. The message object can be retrieved using Tcl_GetObjResult. Otherwise it returns TCL_OK after storing the count and array pointer.

Tcl_ListObjLength returns the number of elements in the list object referenced by listPtr. It returns this count by storing an integer in the address intPtr. If the object is not already a list object, Tcl_ListObjLength will attempt to convert it to one; if the conversion fails, it returns TCL_ERROR and leaves an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. The message object can be retrieved using Tcl_GetObjResult. Otherwise it returns TCL_OK after storing the list's length.

The procedure Tcl_ListObjIndex returns a pointer to the object at element index in the list referenced by listPtr. It returns this object by storing a pointer to it in the address objPtrPtr. If listPtr does not already refer to a list object, Tcl_ListObjIndex will attempt to convert it to one; if the conversion fails, it returns TCL_ERROR and leaves an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. The message object can be retrieved using Tcl_GetObjResult. If the index is out of range, that is, index is negative or greater than or equal to the number of elements in the list, Tcl_ListObjIndex stores a NULL in objPtrPtr and returns TCL_OK. Otherwise it returns TCL_OK after storing the element's object pointer. The reference count for the list element is not incremented; the caller must do that if it needs to retain a pointer to the element.

Tcl_ListObjReplace replaces zero or more elements of the list referenced by listPtr with the objc objects in the array referenced by objv. If listPtr does not point to a list object, Tcl_ListObjReplace will attempt to convert it to one; if the conversion fails, it returns TCL_ERROR and leaves an error message in interp->objResult if interp is not NULL. The message object can be retrieved using Tcl_GetObjResult. Otherwise, it returns TCL_OK after replacing the objects. If objv is NULL, no new elements are added. If the argument first is zero or negative, it refers to the first element. If first is greater than or equal to the number of elements in the list, then no elements are deleted; the new elements are appended to the list. count gives the number of elements to replace. If count is zero or negative then no elements are deleted; the new elements are simply inserted before the one designated by first. Tcl_ListObjReplace invalidates listPtr's old string representation. The reference counts of any elements inserted from objv are incremented since the resulting list now refers to them. Similarly, the reference counts for any replaced objects are decremented.

Because Tcl_ListObjReplace combines both element insertion and deletion, it can be used to implement a number of list operations. For example, the following code inserts the objc objects referenced by the array of object pointers objv just before the element index of the list referenced by listPtr:

result = Tcl_ListObjReplace(interp, listPtr, index, 0, objc, objv);
Similarly, the following code appends the objc objects referenced by the array objv to the end of the list listPtr:
result = Tcl_ListObjLength(interp, listPtr, &length);
if (result == TCL_OK) {
       result = Tcl_ListObjReplace(interp, listPtr, length, 0, objc, objv);
}
The count list elements starting at first can be deleted by simply calling Tcl_ListObjReplace with a NULL objvPtr:
result = Tcl_ListObjReplace(interp, listPtr, first, count, 0, NULL);

SEE ALSO

Tcl_NewObj, Tcl_DecrRefCount, Tcl_IncrRefCount

KEYWORDS

append, index, insert, internal representation, length, list, list object, list type, object, object type, replace, string representation

Last change: 8.0

[ tcl8.0a1 | tk8.0a1 | X-ref ]

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