- NAME
- Tcl_GetInt, Tcl_GetDouble, Tcl_GetBoolean — convert from string
to integer, double, or boolean
- SYNOPSIS
- #include <tcl.h>
- int
- Tcl_GetInt(interp, src, intPtr)
- int
- Tcl_GetDouble(interp, src, doublePtr)
- int
- Tcl_GetBoolean(interp, src, intPtr)
- int
- Tcl_GetBool(interp, src, flags, charPtr)
- ARGUMENTS
- DESCRIPTION
- KEYWORDS
Tcl_GetInt, Tcl_GetDouble, Tcl_GetBoolean — convert from string to
integer, double, or boolean
#include <tcl.h>
int
Tcl_GetInt(interp, src, intPtr)
int
Tcl_GetDouble(interp, src, doublePtr)
int
Tcl_GetBoolean(interp, src, intPtr)
int
Tcl_GetBool(interp, src, flags, charPtr)
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
- Interpreter to use for error reporting.
- const char *src (in)
- Textual value to be converted.
- int *intPtr (out)
- Points to place to store integer value converted from
src.
- double *doublePtr (out)
- Points to place to store double-precision floating-point value
converted from src.
- char *charPtr (out)
- Points to place to store boolean value (0 or 1) value converted
from src.
- int flags (in)
- 0 or TCL_NULL_OK. If TCL_NULL_OK is used, then the empty string
or NULL will result in Tcl_GetBool return TCL_OK, the
*charPtr filled with the value '\xFF';
These procedures convert from strings to integers or
double-precision floating-point values or booleans (represented as
0- or 1-valued integers). Each of the procedures takes a src
argument, converts it to an internal form of a particular type, and
stores the converted value at the location indicated by the
procedure's third argument. If all goes well, each of the
procedures returns TCL_OK. If src does not have
the proper syntax for the desired type then TCL_ERROR is returned, an error
message is left in the interpreter's result, and nothing is stored
at *intPtr or *doublePtr.
Tcl_GetInt expects src to consist of a collection
of integer digits, optionally signed and optionally preceded and
followed by white space. If the first two characters of src
after the optional white space and sign are “0x” then
src is expected to be in hexadecimal form; otherwise, if the
first such characters are “0d” then src is expected
to be in decimal form; otherwise, if the first such characters are
“0o” then src is expected to be in octal form;
otherwise, if the first such characters are “0b” then
src is expected to be in binary form; otherwise, src
is expected to be in decimal form.
Tcl_GetDouble expects src to consist of a
floating-point number, which is: white space; a sign; a sequence of
digits; a decimal point “.”; a sequence of digits; the
letter “e”; a signed decimal exponent; and more white space.
Any of the fields may be omitted, except that the digits either
before or after the decimal point must be present and if the
“e” is present then it must be followed by the exponent
number. If there are no fields apart from the sign and initial
sequence of digits (i.e., no decimal point or exponent indicator),
that initial sequence of digits should take one of the forms that
Tcl_GetInt supports, described above. The use of “,”
as a decimal point is not supported nor should any other sort of
inter-digit separator be present.
Tcl_GetBoolean expects src to specify a boolean
value. If src is any of 0, false, no,
or off, then Tcl_GetBoolean stores a zero value at
*intPtr. If src is any of 1, true,
yes, or on, then 1 is stored at *intPtr. Any
of these values may be abbreviated, and upper-case spellings are
also acceptable.
Tcl_GetBool functions almost the same as
Tcl_GetBoolean, but it has an additional parameter
flags, which can be used to specify whether the empty string
or NULL is accepted as valid.
boolean, conversion, double, floating-point, integer
Copyright © 1989-1993 The Regents of the
University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.