Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 architecture model.
[OpenSPARC-T2-SAM] / sam-t2 / devtools / v9 / man / mann / proc.n
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2'\" Copyright (c) 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
3'\" Copyright (c) 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
4'\"
5'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
6'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
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8'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: proc.n,v 1.3.18.1 2004/10/27 14:23:57 dkf Exp $
9'\"
10'\" The definitions below are for supplemental macros used in Tcl/Tk
11'\" manual entries.
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219See the \\fBoptions\\fR manual entry for details on the standard options.
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226Command-Line Name: \\fB\\$1\\fR
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246.TH proc n "" Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands"
247.BS
248'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below!
249.SH NAME
250proc \- Create a Tcl procedure
251.SH SYNOPSIS
252\fBproc \fIname args body\fR
253.BE
254
255.SH DESCRIPTION
256.PP
257The \fBproc\fR command creates a new Tcl procedure named
258\fIname\fR, replacing
259any existing command or procedure there may have been by that name.
260Whenever the new command is invoked, the contents of \fIbody\fR will
261be executed by the Tcl interpreter.
262Normally, \fIname\fR is unqualified
263(does not include the names of any containing namespaces),
264and the new procedure is created in the current namespace.
265If \fIname\fR includes any namespace qualifiers,
266the procedure is created in the specified namespace.
267\fIArgs\fR specifies the formal arguments to the
268procedure. It consists of a list, possibly empty, each of whose
269elements specifies
270one argument. Each argument specifier is also a list with either
271one or two fields. If there is only a single field in the specifier
272then it is the name of the argument; if there are two fields, then
273the first is the argument name and the second is its default value.
274.PP
275When \fIname\fR is invoked a local variable
276will be created for each of the formal arguments to the procedure; its
277value will be the value of corresponding argument in the invoking command
278or the argument's default value.
279Arguments with default values need not be
280specified in a procedure invocation. However, there must be enough
281actual arguments for all the
282formal arguments that don't have defaults, and there must not be any extra
283actual arguments. There is one special case to permit procedures with
284variable numbers of arguments. If the last formal argument has the name
285\fBargs\fR, then a call to the procedure may contain more actual arguments
286than the procedure has formals. In this case, all of the actual arguments
287starting at the one that would be assigned to \fBargs\fR are combined into
288a list (as if the \fBlist\fR command had been used); this combined value
289is assigned to the local variable \fBargs\fR.
290.PP
291When \fIbody\fR is being executed, variable names normally refer to
292local variables, which are created automatically when referenced and
293deleted when the procedure returns. One local variable is automatically
294created for each of the procedure's arguments.
295Global variables can only be accessed by invoking
296the \fBglobal\fR command or the \fBupvar\fR command.
297Namespace variables can only be accessed by invoking
298the \fBvariable\fR command or the \fBupvar\fR command.
299.PP
300The \fBproc\fR command returns an empty string. When a procedure is
301invoked, the procedure's return value is the value specified in a
302\fBreturn\fR command. If the procedure doesn't execute an explicit
303\fBreturn\fR, then its return value is the value of the last command
304executed in the procedure's body.
305If an error occurs while executing the procedure
306body, then the procedure-as-a-whole will return that same error.
307.SH EXAMPLES
308This is a procedure that accepts arbitrarily many arguments and prints
309them out, one by one.
310.CS
311\fBproc\fR printArguments args {
312 foreach arg $args {
313 puts $arg
314 }
315}
316.CE
317.PP
318This procedure is a bit like the \fBincr\fR command, except it
319multiplies the contents of the named variable by the value, which
320defaults to \fB2\fR:
321.CS
322\fBproc\fR mult {varName {multiplier 2}} {
323 upvar 1 $varName var
324 set var [expr {$var * $multiplier}]
325}
326.CE
327
328.SH "SEE ALSO"
329info(n), unknown(n)
330
331.SH KEYWORDS
332argument, procedure