Languages like C, BASIC, FORTRAN and Java support arrays in which the index value is an integer. Tcl, like most scripting languages (Perl, Python, PHP, etc...) supports associative arrays (also known as "hash tables") in which the index value is a string.
The syntax for an associative array is to put the index within parentheses:
set name(first) "Mary" set name(last) "Poppins" puts "Full name: $name(first) $name(last)"
There are several array commands aside from simply accessing and creating arrays which will be discussed in this and the next lesson.
array exists
arrayName
arrayName
is an array variable. Returns 0
if arrayName
is a scalar variable,
proc, or does not exist.
array names
arrayName
?pattern
arrayName
. If pattern
is supplied, only those indices
that match pattern
are returned. The
match is done using the globbing technique from string match
.
array size
arrayName
arrayName
.
array get
arrayName
array set
arrayName dataList
DataList
is a list in the format of that
returned by array get
. Each odd
member of the list (1, 3, 5, etc) is an index into the
associative array, and the list element following that is the
value of that array member.
array unset
arrayName ?pattern?
pattern
exists, only the elements that
match pattern are unset.
When an associative array name is given as the argument to the
global
command, all the elements of
the associative array become available to that proc. For this
reason, Brent Welch recommends (in
Practical Programming in Tcl and Tk) using an associative
array for the state structure in a package.
This method makes it simpler to share data between many procs that are working together, and doesn't pollute the global namespace as badly as using separate globals for all shared data items.
Another common use for arrays is to store tables of data. In the example below we use an array to store a simple database of names.
proc addname {first last} { global name # Create a new ID (stored in the name array too for easy access) incr name(ID) set id $name(ID) set name($id,first) $first ;# The index is simply a string! set name($id,last) $last ;# So we can use both fixed and ;# varying parts } # # Initialise the array and add a few names # global name set name(ID) 0 addname Mary Poppins addname Uriah Heep addname Rene Descartes addname Leonardo "da Vinci" # # Check the contents of our database # The parray command is a quick way to # print it # parray name # # Some array commands # array set array1 [list {123} {Abigail Aardvark} \ {234} {Bob Baboon} \ {345} {Cathy Coyote} \ {456} {Daniel Dog} ] puts "Array1 has [array size array1] entries\n" puts "Array1 has the following entries: \n [array names array1] \n" puts "ID Number 123 belongs to $array1(123)\n" if {[array exist array1]} { puts "array1 is an array" } else { puts "array1 is not an array" } if {[array exist array2]} { puts "array2 is an array" } else { puts "array2 is not an array" } proc existence {variable} { upvar $variable testVar if { [info exists testVar] } { puts "$variable Exists" } else { puts "$variable Does Not Exist" } } puts "\ntesting unsetting a member of an array" existence a(0) puts "a0 has been unset" unset a(0) existence a(0) puts "\ntesting unsetting several members of an array, with an error" existence a(3) existence a(4) catch {unset a(3) a(0) a(4)} puts "\nAfter attempting to delete a(3), a(0) and a(4)" existence a(3) existence a(4) puts "\nUnset all the array's elements" existence a array unset a * puts "\ntesting unsetting an array" existence a puts "a has been unset" unset a existence a