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- From: lvirden@cas.org (Larry W. Virden)
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.tcl.announce,comp.lang.tcl,comp.lang.perl.tk,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.lang.tcl Frequently Asked Questions (Sep 30, 1997) (1/5)
- Followup-To: comp.lang.tcl
- Date: 30 Sep 1997 15:44:02 -0700
- Organization: The Tcl/Tk FAQ Group
- Lines: 1921
- Sender: mitchellorg@non.non.net
- Approved: tcl-announce@mitchell.org,news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 1 Nov 97 23:59:00 GMT
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- Reply-To: lvirden@cas.org (Larry W. Virden)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 205.217.47.130
- Summary: A regular posting of the comp.lang.tcl Frequently Asked Questions
- (FAQ) and their answers. This is the first of five parts.
- This part introduces Tcl and Tk and discusses documentation, etc.
- Keywords: tcl, extended tcl, tk, expect
- X-Original-Originator: lvirden@cas.org
- X-Original-Sender: lvirden@cas.org
- X-Url: http://www.teraform.com/%7Elvirden/tcl-faq/part1.html
- Archive-name: tcl-faq/part1
- X-Auth: PGPMoose V1.1 PGP comp.lang.tcl.announce
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- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.lang.tcl.announce:549 comp.lang.tcl:72658 comp.lang.perl.tk:5456 comp.answers:28276 news.answers:113443
-
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: Sep 30, 1997
- Version: 8.006
- URL: http://www.teraform.com/%7Elvirden/tcl-faq/part1.html
- Comp-lang-tcl-archive-name: tcl-faq.part01
-
- For more information concerning Tcl (see "tcl-faq/part2"),
- (see "tcl-faq/part3"), (see "tcl-faq/part4"), or (see "tcl-faq/part5").
- Also (see "tcl-faq/bibliography/part1").
-
- Index of questions:
-
- I. Origin of comp.lang.tcl, the FAQ information, and
- to whom do I contact for more information about the FAQ?
- II. What is Tcl? Tk? Extended Tcl? What is Tcl _not_?
- III. Do these packages run on my machine?
- A. Unix
- B. MacOS
- C. INTEL DOS-like systems
- D. VMS
- E. AmigaDOS
- F. NeXT
- G. Other
- IV. Other than C, What languages can talk to tcl/tk?
- A. Shell
- B. C++
- C. Modula-3
- D. Eiffel
- E. Ada
- F. Perl
- G. Prolog
- H. Other
- V. What training material is available?
- A. Books
- B. Training courses, etc.
- C. Time-related seminars, conferences, workshops.
- VI. Where do I report problems, bugs, or enhancements about Tcl - or -
- what is comp.lang.tcl?
-
- End of FAQ Index
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -I- Origin of comp.lang.tcl, the FAQ information, and
- to whom do I contact for more information about the FAQ?
-
- What is comp.lang.tcl?
-
- First, let me assure you what it is not.
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> (and <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl.announce> now)
- are NOT bulletin boards. They are not, innately, mailing lists. Some
- users may experience the messages in those manners, but these
- communities of users are what is known as USENET newsgroups. While
- Dr. John Ousterhout was the creator of the original, unmoderated
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl>, in the current incarnation, clt (as it is
- often referenced) has no moderator, no owner, no authority to whom one can
- appeal when one feels slighted, offended, libeled, etc. On the other hand,
- there are a group of moderators associated with
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl.announce>, whose job it is to ensure that the
- postings there remain 'on charter'. Another newsgroup which you might
- encounter Tcl discussion is <URL:news:alt.comp.tkdesk>, where discussions
- about the Tk application TkDesk may take place. Discussion about SCO's
- vtcl (a graphical interface extension based on the Motif library) can be
- found on <URL:news:comp.unix.sco.programmer>. And of course, discussions of
- ports of Tcl/Tk/other Tcl-based extensions and programs can be found on
- the appropriate OS related newsgroups.
-
- The majority of readers of <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> are
- access the postings in English, and seem to prefer plain text postings
- formatted to 78 or less characters per line, as opposed to HTML, Postscript,
- MIME base64, Macintosh special character sets, etc.. They also prefer to
- have postings which specify a working email address in the From or Reply-To
- header (or at least in the body of the msg somewhere). While
- alternatives to that are certainly possible, you decrease the chance of
- getting a timely relevant answer by choosing alternatives to these.
- These rules are not unique to clt, but are the typical USENET netiquette
- that posters are asked to respect. As an alternative to this,
- there are the French <URL:news:fr.comp.lang.tcl>, German
- <URL:news:de.comp.lang.tcl>, and Japanese <URL:news:fj.lang.tcl>
- equivalents of <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl>.
-
- One question that comes up fairly often concerning
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> is 'why isn't it split?'. The newsgroup varies
- in traffic, but I have seen as many as 45 messages a day
- (counting current cross postings, etc.)
- Currently, many have come
- forward with ideas on how a split could be handled, but no concensus
- has been reached. Also, no moderators have stepped forward to take
- over moderation of a split group. During January, 1996,
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl.announce>, a moderated group containing
- announcements of new software, doc, etc. relating to Tcl, was created.
- So as of right now, asking to split the newsgroup only adds to the existing
- traffic, without resolving any problems.
-
- The information in this set of FAQs comes from several sources. The
- primary source of information is the group itself - I spend (much too
- much) time each month culling through what I feel are some of the best
- answers, gathering up new information on ports, etc. and adding it
- here. I also gather new application information and add it as
- best I can. The next most predominant source of information comes from
- the authors of the various software packages. Finally, a small amount
- comes from my personal experiences. You can find my general
- Tcl FAQs at either <URL:http://www.teraform.com/%7Elvirden/tcl-faq/> or
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq.part01.gz>
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq.part02.gz>,
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq.part03.gz>,
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq.part04.gz>,
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq.part05.gz>.
-
- The primary location for the commercial use of Tcl FAQ is
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-commercial-faq-p1.gz>,
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-commercial-faq-p2.gz>,
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-commercial-faq-p3.gz>,
- as well as <URL:http://www.cpu.com/tclcom1.htm>.
- The author is <URL:mailto:gwl@cpu.com> (Gerald W. Lester). This FAQ
- contains information either about commercial products which incorporate
- Tcl as a part of them, firms which teach classes about Tcl and Tk in some
- manner, and other commercial ventures. Please be sure to contact
- the maintainer for all relevant material about _your_ product!
-
- The FAQ containing a series of Tcl-related questions
- and answers is managed by <URL:mailto:jmoss@ichips.intel.com> (Joe Moss).
- (See "tcl-faq/usage"), <URL:http://psg.com/%7Ejoem/tcl/faq.html> or find it at
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq-usage.gz>.
-
- The FAQ containing Tk-related questions and answers is managed by
- <URL:mailto:jeff.hobbs@acm.org> (Jeffrey Hobbs). You can find it at
- <URL:http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/research/tcl/faqs/tk/>.
-
- A bibliography of published material related to Tcl will be
- managed by <URL:mailto:glv@utdallas.edu> (Glenn Vanderburg).
- (See "tcl-faq/bibliography/part1") or ftp it at
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/info/faq/tcl-faq-bib.gz>.
-
- Cameron Laird <URL:claird@Starbase.NeoSoft.COM> has made
- available his personal notes on mistakes frequently made by newcomers to
- Tcl at <URL:http://starbase.neosoft.com/%7Eclaird/comp.lang.tcl/fmm.html> and
- will update it as time permits. Cameron maintains one of the more
- unusual FAQ pages as well - the Unanswered Frequently-Asked Questions
- about Tcl page
- <URL:http://starbase.neosoft.com/%7Eclaird/comp.lang.tcl/tcl-UFAQ.html>.
-
- FAQs are also available for the Windows port of Tcl
- <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/tclwin.htm>
- and perl/Tk <URL:http://w4.lns.cornell.edu/%7Epvhp/ptk/ptkFAQ.html>.
-
- A renewal of the effort of converting the FAQs to Japanese has
- begun. You can find the ongoing updates (currently things are still old)
- at <URL:http://www.tohoku.iij.ad.jp/%7Etaguchi/tcl-tk/JpDocs/index-en.html>.
- It is being built by Taguchi Takeshi <URL:mailto:taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
- and Oota Toshiya <URL:mailto:oota@pes.com1.fc.nec.co.jp>.
-
- If you have corrections, enhancements, modifications,
- clarifications, suggestions, ideas, new questions, new answers to
- questions which have never been asked, or something else that I have
- not covered above, contact me at <URL:mailto:lvirden@cas.org>.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -II- What is Tcl? Tk? Extended Tcl?
-
- o Highlights of Tcl based languages
-
- Tcl and Tk originated with Dr. John Ousterhout (OH'-stir-howt)
- from the University of California, Berkeley, California. A quip about
- the pronunciation of Dr. O's last name from <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> pundit
- <URL:mailto:js@aelfric.bu.edu> Jay Sekora:
-
- > `It's pronounced Oh-stir-howt
- > without a doubt!
- > Not Oh-stir-hoot;
- > he's not a brute.'
-
- Dr. Ousterhout got the idea for Tcl while on sabbatical leave
- at DEC's Western Research Laboratory in the fall of 1987. He started
- actually implementing it when he got back to Berkeley in the spring of
- 1988; by summer of that year it was in use in some internal
- applications, but there was no Tk. The first external releases of Tcl
- were in 1989. Tk implemention began in 1989, and the first release of
- Tk was in 1991.
-
- Tcl (current release version 8.0) stands for ``tool command
- language'' and is pronounced ``tickle.'' The home download site for
- the Tcl source code is <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/TclTkCore/>.
- Tcl is actually two things: a language and a library. First, Tcl is a
- simple textual language, intended primarily for issuing commands to
- interactive programs such as text editors, debuggers, illustrators, and
- shells. It has a simple syntax and is also programmable, so Tcl users
- can write command procedures to provide more powerful commands than
- those in the built-in set.
-
- Second, Tcl is a library package that can be embedded in
- application programs. The Tcl library consists of a parser for the Tcl
- language, routines to implement the Tcl built-in commands, and
- procedures that allow each application to extend Tcl with additional
- commands specific to that application. The application program
- generates Tcl commands and passes them to the Tcl parser for
- execution. Commands may be generated by reading characters from an
- input source, or by associating command strings with elements of the
- application's user interface, such as menu entries, buttons, or
- keystrokes. When the Tcl library receives commands it parses them into
- component fields and executes built-in commands directly. For commands
- implemented by the application, Tcl calls back to the application to
- execute the commands. In many cases commands will invoke recursive
- invocations of the Tcl interpreter by passing in additional strings to
- execute (procedures, looping commands, and conditional commands all
- work in this way).
-
- An application program gains several advantages by using Tcl for
- its command language. First, Tcl provides a standard syntax: once
- users know Tcl, they will be able to issue commands easily to any
- Tcl-based application. Second, Tcl provides programmability. All a
- Tcl application needs to do is to implement a few application-specific
- low-level commands. Tcl provides many utility commands plus a general
- programming interface for building up complex command procedures. By
- using Tcl, applications need not re-implement these features. Third,
- extensions to Tcl, such as the Tk toolkit, provide mechanisms for
- communicating between applications by sending Tcl commands back and
- forth. The common Tcl language framework makes it easier for
- applications to communicate with one another.
-
- Note that Tcl was designed with the philosophy that one should
- actually use two or more languages when designing large software
- systems. One for manipulating complex internal data structures, or
- where performance is key, and another, such as Tcl, for writing
- smallish scripts that tie together the other pieces, providing hooks for
- the user to extend. For the Tcl script writer, ease of learning, ease of
- programming and ease of gluing are more important than performance or
- facilities for complex data structures and algorithms. Tcl was
- designed to make it easy to drop into a lower language when you come
- across tasks that make more sense at a lower level. In this way,
- the basic core functionality can remain small and one need only bring
- along pieces that one particular wants or needs.
-
- For a white paper written by Dr. Ousterhout discussing
- scripting languages, and Tcl in particular, see
- <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/%7Eouster/scripting.html>.
- For a recent cover article in SunWorld on the state of Tcl today,
- see <URL:http://www.sun.com/960710/cover/index.html>.
-
- Tk (current release 8.0) is an extension to Tcl which
- provides the programmer with an interface to the X11 windowing system.
- Note that Tk has been successfully compiled under X11 R4, X11 R5, X11
- R6, as well as Sun's NeWS/X11 environments. The home download site for
- this Tk release is <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/TclTkCore/>.
-
- Many users will encounter Tcl and Tk via the ``wish'' command. Wish
- is a simple windowing shell which permits the user to write Tcl/Tk
- applications in a prototyping environment.
-
- <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/people/john.ousterhout/> and
- <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/> are available for more details about Tcl
- and Tk.
-
- Note that one frequently asked question is whether Tcl/Tk
- can handle Japanese, Chinese, Korean, .... language fonts. As of 8.0, it
- cannot not, as distributed by Sun. However, as of June 1997, it was
- the intention of the Sun team to provide full Unicode support in Tcl 8.1.
-
- John has given me permission to add this quote as well:
-
- >From: ouster@tcl.eng.sun.com (John Ousterhout)
- >Newsgroups: comp.lang.tcl
- >Subject: Re: The future of TcL/Tk's Copyright Terms
- >Date: 31 Aug 1994 20:08:19 GMT
- >Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- >Message-ID: <342nvj$6e9@engnews2.Eng.Sun.COM>
-
- > I discussed the status of the Tcl and Tk libraries with people at Sun
- > as part of my pre-hire negotiations, and we're in agreement that they
- > will remain free and unrestricted just as they have always been. Future
- > enhancements made to Tcl and Tk by my group at Sun, including the ports
- > to Macs and PCs, will be made freely available to anyone to use for
- > any purpose. My view, and that of the people I report to at Sun, is
- > that it wouldn't work for Sun to try to take Tcl and Tk proprietary
- > anyway: someone (probably me, in a new job) would just pick up the
- > last free release and start an independent development path. This
- > would be a terrible thing for everyone since it would result in
- > incompatible versions.
-
- > Of course, Sun does need to make money from the work of my team or else
- > they won't be able to continue to support us. Our current plan is to
- > charge for development tools and interesting extensions and applications.
- > Balancing the public and the profitable will be an ongoing challenge for
- > us, but it is very important both to me and to Sun to keep the support
- > of the existing Tcl community. I imagine this discussion will repeat
- > from time to time over the next few years, but I think we can make things
- > work out well for everyone.
-
- John also has asked me to mention that information about what is
- new or changed in each release is now available on the WWW. John writes:
-
- > there are now pages containing release notes. The best thing is just to
- > refer people to my home page, which is:
-
- > <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/people/john.ousterhout/>
- > <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/research/%7Eouster/>
- > <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/>
-
- > You might put a notice about this in the FAQ to help people who see
- > the FAQ after we reorganize.
-
- A Tcl/Tk logo and a "Tcl-Powered" logo are now available from Sun.
- These no longer require a license signing. GIF images in several different
- sizes are available in the Tk distribution's library/images subdirectory.
-
- Finally, during April and May of 1997, the Sun research group
- responsible for Tcl development were spun off into a new business
- group. Since that time, things have again changed. See
- <URL:http://starbase.neosoft.com/%7Eclaird/comp.lang.tcl/SunScript_story>
- for a copy of the message posted by John Ousterhout regarding the
- situation as of Summer 1997. See <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/>
- for all the current details about the status of this group.
-
- During August of 1997, a Tcl Consortium began to form. You
- can read more about it, including how to join, who currently serves on
- the board of directors, etc. by visiting <URL:http://www.tcltk.com/consortium/>.
-
-
- Extended Tcl (tclX) (Version 7.6.0 and 8.0.0) is an
- extended set of commands for Tcl developed by Karl Lehenbauer and Mark
- Diekhans. The authors' home ftp site for Extended Tcl is
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/distrib/tclx/>. Extended Tcl
- is oriented towards system programming tasks, with many additional
- interfaces to the Unix operating system as well as other useful
- utilities.
-
- Expect (Version 5.22) was perhaps the first extension to Tcl
- written. It's purpose is to ease interaction with applications which
- normally interact directly with users at a terminal (such as ftp,
- telnet, etc.). The WWW site for Expect is <URL:http://expect.nist.gov/>.
- Expect is oriented towards automating command seuqences commonly
- typed. One can use Expect with Tk to create graphical interfaces to
- these commands as well. Expect works with Tcl 7.6/8.0.
-
-
- Many other useful (and in some cases essential) extensions
- also exist. (See "tcl-faq/part5") for details.
-
-
- o General information about Tcl and Tk by <URL:mailto:glv@utdallas.edu>
- (Glenn Vanderburg)
-
- Tcl (Tool command language) is a freely distributable simple,
- interpreted language designed to be used as a common extension and
- customization language for applications. It was designed and
- implemented by Dr. John Ousterhout in the hope that application
- designers could spend more of their time on applications and less on
- scripting languages, and in the hope that users could spend less time
- learning new scripting languages for each new application. Many useful
- applications, some of them sold commercially, use Tcl as their
- scripting language.
-
- Tcl is clean and regular, and relatively easy for non-hackers to
- learn. It is command-oriented, and commands added by applications and
- users exist on an equal footing with the built-in Tcl commands. Tcl
- has both simple variables and associative arrays (tables), and all
- values (including procedure bodies) are represented as strings.
- Simple customization scripts (such as preference initialization
- scripts) usually look much like novice users expect them to: a series
- of simple commands which set options.
-
- Tcl is implemented as a C library, which can be embedded in an
- application. The application can add its own commands to the
- interpreter (using a clean C interface). It is distributed under a
- license which allows use for any purpose with no royalties.
-
- The Tk toolkit is a Tcl extension (a group of new Tcl commands) which
- provides a Tcl interface to the X Window System. Tk is one of the
- easiest ways to build a graphical interface to an application, and due
- to the interpreted nature of Tcl, Tk-based interfaces tend to be much
- more customizable and dynamic than those built with one of the C- or
- C++-based toolkits. Tk implements the Motif look and feel. A number
- of interesting X applications are implemented entirely in Tk, with no
- new application-specific commands at all. Tk also provides a
- mechanism by which one application can send Tcl scripts to other
- Tk-based applications running on the same display, for easy
- cooperation between tools.
-
- Tcl and Tk are mature, and quite stable, but they are not static:
- Dr. Ousterhout has moved from Berkeley to Sun Microsystems, where his
- group is pursuing such projects as a commercial-quality Tk
- graphical interface designer, an on-the-fly Tcl compiler, and
- Macintosh and Microsoft Windows ports of Tk. John has stated that the
- copyright status and licensing provisions of Tcl and Tk will not change.
-
- ----
-
- As to what Tcl is not - in the context of the discussion in
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl>, it is not related directly to the
- Think C Library (TCL) available on the Mac. Confusingly enough, the language
- concerned with here _is_ available on the Mac, and someone in fact may have
- used Think C to compile it there. Just one of those universal 'coincidences'
- that set the stage for Vogon interstellar highway construction crews.
- Also, Oracle has a product called Tk2Motif which has nothing to do with
- Tcl or Tk as we are referring to it. Another 'TCL' that is sometimes
- encountered has to do with the Pick operating system - again, that
- is different than the language being discussed.
-
-
- One question that is becoming common is whether Tcl/Tk/etc. is
- Year 2000 (Y2K) compliant. Older versions of the core Tcl (pre 7.5) have no
- clock specific commands, and so have no Year 2000 problems. It is
- recommended that users of Tcl 7.5 or newer upgrade to at least Tcl
- 7.6p2, where the Tcl clock command has been patched to get around known
- problems surrounding Year 2000 issues. However, this does not imply
- that Tcl some how prevents the user from being able to write software
- that will break in the Year 2000 - only that Tcl and Tk as distributed
- from 7.6p2/4.2p2 on has addressed all reported Year 2000 issues.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -III- Do these packages run on my machine?
-
-
- A. Unix
-
- Tcl runs on Sun 3s and 4s running SunOS 4 and SunOS 5 (Solaris
- 1.x and 2.x), DECstations running Ultrix, DEC VAXen running Ultrix or
- BSD, DEC Alphas running OSF/1, 386s running SCO Unix, Xenix, Bell-Tech,
- all sorts of HPs running HP-UX (even HP Snakes
- running OSF/1 and HP-UX). Intel [34]86 systems running
- 386bsd, netbsd, freebsd, BSDI, and Linux have Tcl ported. Various CPUs
- running System V.4 report having ported Tcl. Tcl also appears to be
- running on Sequent Symmetry running Dynix as well as OSF/1. It also
- has been reported to run fine on IBM RS6000 under AIX 3.x as well as
- IBM ES/9000 and AIX/ESA. There were few problems getting it running
- under Mt. Xinu Mach. It also has been ported to Encore 91's running
- UMAX V (an 88k based System V with BSD extension Unix). It also runs
- on Apollos running BSD/SYSV. Tcl runs on a Cray running Unicos.
- Someone ported Tcl to a Sony NeWS machine running NEWS-OS 4.2.
- A port to a Convex 3220 and 3880 was also reported.
- Folks have compiled Tcl/Tk/BLT/itcl to a Mac running the latest A/UX.
- A port to Tenon MachTen 2.1VM, running on a Mac II which was running
- MacOS System 7.1, has been reported. The autoconfig did most of the work.
- That particular user had not ported Tk to this environment yet.
- Tcl also runs on Supermax Motorola/MIPS based multiprocessors
- under SMOS.
-
- Tk (being based on Tcl) generally requires X11R4 or better as
- the only additional software requirement. It runs on any of the above
- Unix systems with that base of software. It also runs on VMS and
- OSF/1.
-
- Note that SGI is shipping Tcl/Tk, TclMotif, expect, and some other
- custom extensions along with the OS starting with Irix 6.2. The desktop
- environment is called Indigo Magic.
-
- For information on Tcl/Tk/TclX availability (see "tcl-faq/part4").
-
-
- B. MacOS
-
- (See "tcl-faq/part2") for details of a Macintosh Tcl Mailing list.
-
- From Tcl 7.5/Tk 4.1 on, the source code for Tcl and Tk should
- compile and run on a Macintosh from the original distribution. Learn
- more about this from reading
- <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/mac/mactcl-project.html>
-
- Also (see "tcl-faq/part4"), the Tcl programs/packages catalog,
- for the latest port locations and versions.
-
-
- C. INTEL DOS-like systems
-
- From Tcl 7.5 on, the source code for Tcl and Tk should compile
- and run on Windows machines from the original distribution. See
- <URL:http://sunscript.sun.com/win/wintcl-project.html> for the details.
-
- Steve Furr <URL:mailto:furr@qnx.com> reports getting Tcl ported
- to QNX without a lot of trouble. He mentions that QNX users who have
- the beta X should have gotten a CD-ROM update with Tcl and Tk on the
- CD.
-
- A port of Tcl 7.3, except for glob or command pipelines, to OS/2 2.x
- using C Set++ has been done by <URL:mailto:wwb@wwa.com> (Bud Bach).
- Andreas Stuebinger <URL:mailto:stuebing@infosun.fmi.uni-passau.de>
- also has done an OS/2 port of Tcl (version unknown). Tcl 7.4 has been
- ported to OS/2 by Stefano Fornari <URL:mailto:fornari@ipvvis.unipv.it>
- It is available at <URL:ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/devtools/languages/>.
-
- Illya Vaes <URL:mailto:ivaes@hr.ns.nl> is working on a port of
- Tk 4.1 (the Win32 version) to OS/2 Presentation Manager. He is using the
- native PM/GPI calls and should be able to support OS/2 2.x. It is reported
- that Ilya Zakharevich <URL:mailto:ilya@math.ohio-state.edu> is doing something
- similar, using the Developer's API extensions to directly support most of
- the Win32 API's under OS/2 Warp with DAX/DAPIE and Fixpack 17 installed
- and the Open32 manager. Contact them for more details on the progress
- being made.
-
- Also (see "tcl-faq/part4"), the Tcl programs/packages catalog,
- for the latest port locations.
-
-
- D. VMS
-
- A port of Tcl 7.3 and Tk 3.6 to VMS was done by Angel Li
- <URL:mailto:angel@flipper.rsmas.miami.edu>. The files are at
- <URL:ftp://mango.rsmas.miami.edu/pub/VMS-tcl/tcl73-tk36-itcl13.tar.Z>
- and were compressed with the Unix compress command. The pathname may
- be subject to change as I have seen notes from Angel Li mentioning that
- BLT 1.6 and the photo widget have also been ported. These were compiled
- on an Alpha running OpenVMS T6.1.
-
- A port of Tcl 6.3 onto VMS 5.5 was done by Wolfgang Kechel
- <URL:mailto:wolfgang@pr-wiesbaden.de> and Till Imanuel Panzschke. Contact them
- directly for assistance.
-
- A port of most of Tcl 6.7 and Tk 3.2 was done by John Kimball
- <URL:mailto:jkimball@src.honeywell.com> to VMS 5.5. The files are on
- <URL:ftp://src.honeywell.com/pub/tcl67-tk32-on-vms55.tar.Z>.
-
- A port of Tcl 7.0 and Tk 3.3 has being done to VMS on the
- VAX and Alpha. These are available as:
- <URL:ftp://src.honeywell.com/pub/vms-tcl/tcl70-tk33-on-vms55.tar.Z>
- or
- <URL:ftp://src.honeywell.com/pub/tcl70-tk33-on-vms55.tar.Z>.
-
- Gerald W. Lester <URL:mailto:gwlester@cpu.com> says the following
- _should_ work. If you installed the POSIX package on VMS (its free),
- then you should be able to configure and make tcl. To access tcl you
- would have to do one of the following: 1) Use the POSIX shell, or 2) do
- a "psx tcl". Tcl scripts would not execute directly from DCL; to
- execute a script foo.tcl from DCL you would have to do "psx foo.tcl".
- DISCLAIMER: I have not built any version of tcl under VMS POSIX, these
- comments are based on other work I've done with VMS POSIX.
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/sorted/distrib/vms-sharable-binaries.tar.gz>
- is a version of Tcl/Tk for VMS built as a sharable library. It
- includes a dynamic module loading command. Otherwise, it matches the
- src.honeywell.com version.
-
- Also (see "tcl-faq/part4"), the Tcl programs/packages catalog,
- for the latest port locations.
-
-
- E. AmigaDOS
-
- Karl Lehbauer <URL:mailto:karl@sugar.NeoSoft.com> has indicated that
- he started a port of Tcl 3.x to the Amiga. He has a working
- version, but is no longer working on it. His version uses the
- Amiga's shared libraries and implements the "send" command.
- He wrote a MIDI file loader and player as well. Contact him for
- further details.
-
- Ty Sarna <URL:mailto:tsarna@endicor.com> has ported Tcl 6.x to the
- Amiga. He says:
- > I've ported 3.3 and several 6.x versions to the Amiga, and it can be
- > done in under and hour if you leave out the "Unix" functionality.
- > However, "Unix" functionality includes things like file I/O!
-
- Another Amiga user, <URL:mailto:colas@opossum.inria.fr>
- (Colas Nahaboo), mentioned that using Amiga gcc and the PD X server DaggeX
- and Xlibs that a port of Tk might be possible.
-
- <URL:mailto:hnm@hermes.bouw.tno.nl> (Marco van der Heiden) has
- completed a port to the Amiga, and suggests Amiga developers contact him
- by email.
-
- <URL:mailto:wulf@hotdog.ping.de> (Berndt Wulf) reports building
- Tcl and Tk on an Amiga system running NetBSD1.0b2, using the sources on
- the Walnut Creek Tcl/Tk CD-ROM.
-
- A version of Tcl is apparently available on Fish disk number 447.
- I do not have information concerning what version of Tcl this is. It
- is my understanding that the Fish disks are available on many of the
- Amiga Internet archive sites, one of which is
- <URL:ftp://ftp.cso.uiuc.edu/>.
-
- Tcl 7.6 and Tk 4.2 can also be found on the Geek Gadgets CDROM
- (formerly known as ADE) and on any ADE/Geek Gadgets FTP server along
- with an X11 server and a complete development kit for unix apps. The
- main site is <URL:ftp:ftp.ninemoons.com/pub/geekgadgets>. This version
- of Tcl/Tk is not limited in any way (ie. everything should work as the
- Unix version) and Tcl/Tk 8.0+ should appear soon.
-
- Also (see "tcl-faq/part4"), the Tcl programs/packages catalog,
- for the latest port locations.
-
-
- F. NeXT
-
- At one time, information about compiling Tcl and Tk were
- in the FAQs. This info appears to be gone now. Perhaps the configure
- information compiles out of the box. If not, please forward info to
- <URL:mailto:lvirden@cas.org> and I can add pointers here to you.
-
-
- G. Other
-
- A port to the Apple IIgs and GNO 1.1/GSOS environment is underway.
-
- A beta port of Tcl 7 has been done to VxWorks.
- You can find it at
- <URL:ftp://thor.atd.ucar.edu/pub/vx/tclvx7.0.v2.tar.gz> or a name
- similar (if updates have occurred).
-
- A port to GEOS was attempted, but it was found to be difficult to
- run there (except perhaps under the desktop platform) due to resource limits
- and constraints.
-
- A port of Tcl/Tk and X11R6 to OS-9 has been reported to be
- done by <URL:mailto:kt@keihh.hanse.de> Kei Thomasen. A different port of
- Tcl/Tk to OS-9 was done by <URL:mailto:oertel@port.de> Heinz-Juergen Oertel.
-
- An alpha port of Tcl 7.5 has been done to BeOS Dr7 by
- Jinwoo Shin <URL:mailto:jwshin@eecs.berkeley.edu>.
-
- Also (see "tcl-faq/part4"), the Tcl programs/packages catalog,
- for the latest port locations.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -IV- Other than C, what languages can talk to tcl/tk?
-
-
- A. Shell
-
- There are a number of interfaces which are shell-like. The
- first is tclsh, which comes as a sample program implementing a Tcl
- interpreter as a part of the Tcl distribution. Another is wish, which
- is a shell-like interface that is a part of the Tk package. Many of
- the other extensions also build interpreters as well. The tclX extension
- is an example - it builds an interpreter called tcl as well as one called
- wishx.
-
-
- B. C++
-
- There is a package called Objectify which can be used to assist
- one in turning C++ classes into Tcl object types.
-
- If you wish to use C++ with Tcl then you must have your main()
- in a source file that is compiled with a C++ compiler; this will
- ensure that the necessary C++ pre-main initialization code is
- executed.
-
- You can call tcl and tk routines (or other C code) routines from C++
- provided that the function prototypes avoid C++ name mangling by using
- the C++ linkage specification :
-
- extern "C" ... prototype ...
-
- Fortunately, tcl.h and tk.h will provide these specifications when
- compiled with a C++ compiler and so you can just use them directly.
-
- You can construct your main using normal tcl and tk routines,
- or use tkMain.c and tkAppInit.c with minor modifications. Ken Yap's
- patch, obtainable from
- <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/alcatel/extensions/tk3.6forC++.patch.gz>,
- is a patch that allows tk 3.6 main.c and other extension routines to be
- compiled with a C++ compiler. Thanks to Ken Yap
- <URL:mailto:ken@syd.dit.csiro.au> for this code.
-
- C++ functions and static class member functions can be used to
- create Tcl command using Tcl_CreateCommand in the normal way.
- Non-static member functions cannot be used so simply, Tcl would
- have to supply a "this" pointer.
-
- SWIG <URL:http://www.cs.utah.edu/%7Ebeazley/SWIG/> is another great
- resource for using C++ and Tcl. To quote the author:
-
- > SWIG is a code development tool created to solve real problems and
- > make C/C++ programming more enjoyable. Simply stated, SWIG
- > allows you to integrate common scripting languages such as Tcl,
- > Perl, Python, and Guile with programs containing collections of
- > functions written in C or C++. By using an interpreted scripting
- > language with a C program, you can do a number of cool things like:
- > Build a powerful interface.
- > Rapidly prototype new features.
- > Interactively debug and test your code.
- > Develop a graphical user interface.
- > Build C/C++ modules for scripting language applications.
- > Save lots of time--allowing you to work on the real problem.
- > Impress your friends.
-
- One user notes:
- > To contrast SWIG with Objectify - SWIG has you prepare a small interface
- > file that specifies what functions are to be wrapped, rather than adding
- > macros to your original header file. It also works with C, as well as
- > C++.
-
-
-
- C. Modula-3
-
- Norman Ramsey <URL:mailto:elan.uucp!nr> says:
- A long time back, Eric Muller posted a Modula-3 interface to
- the C Tcl library. I wrote down a Modula-3/Tcl interface that used
- Modula-3 types rather than C types, and that used objects to build
- closures for commands. I wrote part of the implementation but never
- finished it. I have mailed copies to <URL:mailto:carroll@udel.edu>,
- who asked the question, and I will post them if there seems to be general
- interest.
-
- Also, there is an interface between Tk and Modula-3 that is a part
- of the Modula-3 archives on gatekeeper.dec.com, and Tcl-DP and
- Modula-3 have been merged.
-
-
- D. Eiffel
-
- <URL:mailto:stephan@cs.tu-berlin.de> (Stephan Herrmann) says:
- ... [the tclish package provides] the marriage of two very different
- principles by means of combining two programming languages into a
- hybrid program architecture.
-
- There are three classes for the user - tcl interpretor, tk application,
- and tk window. See <URL:ftp://hepunx.rl.ac.uk/pub/eiffel/tclish> for
- details.
-
-
- E. Ada
-
- <URL:mailto:dennis@dennis.cs.colorado.edu> (Dennis Heimbigner)
- introduced an adatcl package which gives Ada programmers access to Tcl
- interpreters. (See "tcl-faq/part4") for details of the package.
-
- F. Perl
-
- In the past, efforts by Dov Grobgeld
- <URL:mailto:dov@menora.weizmann.ac.il> and Guenther Schreiner
- <URL:mailto:guenther@ira.uka.de> were made to develop at least 2
- Perl 4 to Tcl/Tk interfaces.
-
- More effort has occured in the Perl 5 environment, where an extension
- to allow Perl 5 to directly access the Tcl C API, as well as an extension to
- allow the ability to do Tk programming without a Tcl interpreter involved at
- all are available.
- These packages can be ftp'd from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN)
- - a series of ftp sites which keep the latest and greatest archives of Perl
- code in sync. See <URL:http://www.perl.com/perl/CPAN/CPAN.html> for
- a pointer to CPAN, and follow the links to find the Tcl related Perl packages.
-
-
- G. Prolog
-
- The package ProTcl is an interface between Prolog and Tcl/Tk.
- It works best with ECLiPSe, but the foreign interface of SICStus and Quintus
- is also provided. The interface is dynamically loaded into a Prolog process
- and it gives access to Tcl commands and to handling Tk events. It is also
- possible to call Prolog from Tcl, handle Tk events in Prolog and to
- pass Prolog variables back to Tcl. See
- <URL:http://www.ecrc.de/eclipse/html/protcl.html> for more details.
-
- H. Other
-
- A module for Python based on Tk is available - more details are
- available in <news:comp.lang.python> on this front.
-
- Some work relating to the Fresco CORBA interpreter has resulted in a
- Tcl-based interpreter which interacts with that environment. See
- <URL:http://www.faslab.com/fresco/HomePage.html> for more details.
-
- Tk bindings for the Dylan language are being shipped as a part
- of CMU's Mindy compiler for Dylan. The Sather language also has a set
- of classes to bind in Tk/Tcl.
-
- Duncan Sinclair <URL:mailto:sinclair@dcs.gla.ac.uk> has details of a
- hack into wish.c some hooks for a Tk to any language system, and has been
- using it for communication with functional languages such as Haskell and
- Lazy ML. A paper, plus sample code, is available by ftp from
- <URL:ftp://ftp.dcs.gla.ac.uk/pub/glasgow-fp/authors/Duncan_Sinclair/fumx.*>.
-
- The InterLanguage Unification project is a system that promotes
- software interoperability via interfaces. It has the ability to allow
- Common Lisp, ANSI C, C++, Modula 3 to interact and plans to add Python,
- Tcl, and GNU Emacs-Lisp shortly.
-
- Of course the Wafe application environment is designed to make
- it easier to do X like applications from within several languages using
- Tk as a basis.
-
- There are several interfaces to allow one to interface with SQL
- though some are specific to a database such as Oracle.
-
- There is an interpreter for Silicon Graphics machines for SGI's
- GL language. There is an interface to WOOL. The GNU language Guile not
- only has a Scheme backend, but a Tcl one as well. There are at least
- two interfaces to Tcl for Java. There is a Caml Light interface to
- Tcl/Tk. There is a commercial product which provides an interface
- between Objective C and Tcl. There is an interface between Oz and Tcl/Tk.
- There is a subset of Modula-3 with a Tk binding. There is at least one
- interface between Scheme and Tk. There is a binding in Gopher for Tcl/Tk.
-
- For more details on the above efforts, (see also "tcl-faq/part4").
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -V- What training material is available?
-
-
- Just a note - I don't work for any of these folk. In some cases, folk have
- contributed the description of their books. In most cases, I haven't even
- seen the book that's described.
-
- A. Books
-
-
- 1. Title: Obfuscated C and Other Mysteries.
- Author: Don Libes <URL:mailto:libes@nist.gov>
- Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
- Publication date: October 1992
- ISBN: 0-471-57805-3
- Price: $39.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.wiley.com/compbooks/catalog/02/57805-3.html>
-
- This is not your typical programming book. This book discusses programming
- in the Unix environment in a humorous manner. However, specific
- solutions to issues are addressed. Separate chapters on Tcl and Expect
- are made covered.
-
- 2. Title: Tcl and the Tk Toolkit
- Author: John K. Ousterhout <URL:mailto:ouster@tcl.eng.sun.com>
- Publisher: Addison-Wesley
- Publication date: April 1994
- Third printing: 1994
- ISBN: 0-201-63337-X
- Pages: 480
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.aw.com/cp/Oust.html>
- Book's examples: <URL:ftp://ftp.smli.com/pub/tcl/book.examples.Z>
-
- The book primarily covers Tcl 7.3 and Tk 3.6. A German translation of
- this book, titled _Tcl und Tk_, with the ISBN of 3-89319-793-1, is also
- available.
-
- While the book is a good intro to Tcl, it's basis on the older
- Tk makes it difficult to use for some types of Tk development.
-
- In regards to questions about new revisions to the book, John
- has indicated that a new revision would be unlikely to appear before
- Tcl 8.x is released.
-
- 3. Title: X User Tools
- Author: Linda Mui and Valier Quercia
- Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
- 103A Morris Street
- Sebastopol, CA US 95472
- Publication date: November 1994
- ISBN: 1-56592-019-8
- Pages: 856
- Price: $49.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/xtools/>
-
- Chapter 30 covers writing tools in Tcl/Tk. Several Tcl and Tk tools
- are available on the CD-ROM. However, since it is more than 2 years old,
- it is a rather outdated version of Tcl/Tk.
-
- 4. Title: Exploring Expect
- Subtitle: A Tcl-Based Toolkit for Automating Interactive Applications
- Author: Don Libes <URL:mailto:libes@nist.gov>
- Publisher: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc
- Publication date: December 1994
- ISBN: 1-56592-092-2
- Pages: 602
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/expect/>
- Book's examples: <URL:ftp://ftp.cmd.nist.gov/pub/expect/expect.tar.gz>
- Errata: <URL:ftp://ftp.cme.nist.gov/pub/expect/errata>
-
- Email orders: <URL:mailto:order@ora.com>
- HTTP orders: <URL:http://nearnet.gnn.com/gnn/bus/ora/ordering/>
- Credit card orders (M-F 6am-6pm PST): (800) 889-8969 / (707) 829-0515
- Mailing Address: O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
- 103A Morris Street
- Sebastopol, CA US 95472
-
- For all of you who thought that the Expect man page was too long and too
- terse at the same time, this book provides relief. "Exploring Expect"
- is an introduction and comprehensive tutorial to Expect. Numerous
- examples are provided and explained, demonstrating how to save you time
- and money. Example topics include how to write patterns, do signal
- handling, use Expect as a telnetable daemon, and use Expect with Tk and
- other Tcl extensions.
-
- The book also includes an innovative introduction to Tcl - if you've
- had trouble using Tcl before, all of a sudden, it will make a lot more
- sense. And while Exploring Expect concentrates primarily on using
- Expect with Tcl, programmers attempting to automate interactive
- programs using C, Perl, Python, or any other language will find this
- book helpful because many of the concepts underlying Expect-like
- programming are common to all languages.
-
- Exploring Expect remains in the first edition. There have only been a
- few corrections and updates so they have been easily incorporated in
- new printings. The last time Don had to make any corrections was in the
- third printing.
-
- Exploring Expect was originally based on Tcl 7.3 and 7.4 alpha.
- However, the book correctly describes 7.5 as well. Almost all of the
- recent changes in Tcl were under the cover - which is not the focus of
- Don's book, so it is still accurate.
-
- Interesting story time: Don only needed to make one change in the book
- when Tcl 7.4 came out of alpha. Tcl 7.4 added checking for overflow
- which was something his random number generator didn't like. So he
- changed the constants in the 2nd printing to avoid this problem.
- Later, Ousterhout got enough grief from people that he later changed
- it back. So it turned out that Don really hadn't needed to make any
- changes to the book after all.
-
- The book was also based on Tk 3.6 and Tk 4 alpha. Don's book doesn't
- go into enough depth on Tk that this really matters - in fact, he only
- needed to mention a difference between Tk 3 and Tk 4 at one point. So
- the text is still accurate. He does, however, have a lot of real code
- and some of the Tk examples no longer work quite right because of the
- way bind changed. However, all of those examples come with the Expect
- tar file and they are Tk4-ized, so it shouldn't be a significant
- problem. The text describing the examples is still correct.
-
- Note that a new version of Expect is in testing for Tcl 7.6. To get it
- check on the WWW home page for the beta version of Expect.
-
- The WWW home for Expect is <URL:http://expect.nist.gov/>.
-
- 5. Title: How to Manage Your Network Using SNMP
- Subtitle: The Networking Management Practicum
- Authors: Marshall T. Rose <URL:mailto:mrose@dbc.mtview.ca.us> and
- Keith McCloghrie
- Publisher: Prentice Hall
- Publication date: January 1995
- ISBN: 0-13-141517-4.
- Price: $52.00 US
-
- _How to Manage your Network..." describes a Tcl-based SNMP API, and contains
- several example programs.
-
- 6. Title: MH and xmh
- Subtitle: E-mail for users and programmers 3rd edition
- Author: Jerry Peek
- Publisher: O'REILLY AND ASSOCIATES
- Publication date: April 1995
- ISBN: 1-56592-093-7
- Pages: 782
- Price: $34.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/mh3/noframes.html>
-
- Besides the obvious also covered the Tk application exmh. According
- to the publisher, this product has been discontinued.
-
- 7. Title: Practical Programming in Tcl and Tk
- Author: Brent Welch <URL:mailto:bwelch@eng.sun.com>
- *First edition:
- Publisher: Prentice Hall
- Publication date: May 1995
- ISBN: 0-13-182007-9
- Pages: 400
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.prenhall.com/013/182006/18200-6.html>
- Book's examples: <URL:ftp://ftp.prenhall.com/pub/software/welch/tkbook.tar>
- Errata: <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/%7Ebwelch/book/>.
-
- This book discusses Tcl 7.4 and Tk 4.0. It features
- about 5000 lines of Tcl and 2400 lines of C code, which come with the
- book on a floppy. The book describes and summaries all the Tcl and
- Tk commands and widgets. There are longer examples that put together
- small applications. The sections on C programmer are not intended to
- be complete references to the C interfaces - use the man pages for
- that information. A draft of the book - except for the index - is
- available as <URL:ftp://parcftp.xerox.com/pub/sprite/welch/tkbook.ps.gz>.
- Also, see <URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/%7Ebwelch/bwelch.html> for links to
- pages about the book.
-
- The first edition of the book is a good intro to Tcl, the next
- edition will makes it easier to use with the more recent Tk/Tcl features
- such as megawidgets, packages, etc.
-
- *Second edition:
- Author: Brent Welch <URL:mailto:welch@acm.org>
- Publisher: Prentice Hall
- Publication date: June 1997
- ISBN: 0-13-616830-2
- Price: $42.00 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.smli.com/people/brent.welch/book/2nd/>
- Book's table of contents: <URL:http://www.beedub.com/book/>
-
- This updated edition describes Tcl 7.6 and Tk 4.2, with some references to
- a few features that will appear in later versions of Tcl.
-
- 8. Title: UNIX Test Tools and Benchmarks
- Subtitle: Methods and Tools to Design, Develop, and Execute Functional,
- Structural Reliability, and Regression Tests, 1/e
- Author: Rodney C. Wilson
- Publisher: PTR Prentice Hall
- Publication date: July 1995
- ISBN: 0-13-125634-3
- Pages: 340
- Price: $47.00 US
-
- This book covers in-depth discussions of state of the art
- testing strategies, technologies, and benchmarking products.
- Among the testing tools covered are expect, Tcl, Tk and many others.
-
- 9. Title: Linux: Configuration and Installation Book/CD Package
- Author: Patrick Volkerding, Kevin Reichard
- Publisher: Henry Holt & Co.
- Publication date: August 1995
- ISBN: 1558284265
- Pages: 450
- Price: $39.95 US
-
- Deals with Linux administration. Has a chapter on programming using C, C++,
- Perl and Tcl/Tk. Comes with a CD-ROM.
-
- 10. Title: Tcl and Tk reference manual
- Editors: Donald Barnes, Marc Ewing <URL:mailto:marc@redhat.com>, Erik Troan
- Publisher: Red Hat Software, Inc.
- Publication date: September 1995
- ISBN: 1-885329-08-3
- Pages: 645
- LoC: QA76.73.T44
-
- Red Hat Software
- 25 Sylvan Road South
- Wesport, CT 06880
- (800) 546-7274
- (203) 454-2582
- (203) 454-5500 (FAX)
-
- E-mail: <URL:mailto:sales@redhat.com>
- Price: $24.95 US
-
- A printed copy of the Tcl 7.4/Tk 4.0 man pages, along with a table of
- contents, standard index, and permutated index has been published.
-
- 11. Title: The Visualization Toolkit
- Subtitle: An Object-Oriented Approach to 3D Graphics
- Author: Will Schroeder, Ken Martin, Bill Lorensen
- Publisher: PTR Prentice Hall
- Publication date: January 1996
- ISBN: 0-13-199837-4
- Price: $59.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.prenhall.com/013/199836/ptr/19983-6.html>
-
- The book contains software and information to assist you in transforming
- data into 3D graphics. The book covers key algorithms, modeling, and
- techniques for various types of visualization. The CD-ROM contains
- 400 megabytes of software, data images, and documentation.
- The software runs on Unix, Windows 95, and Windows NT.
-
- 12. Title: Graphical Applications with Tcl & Tk
- Author: Eric F. Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: M&T Books
- Publication date: February 1996
- ISBN: 1-55851-471-6
- Pages: 374
- Price: $39.95 US
- WWW book info: <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/tclbook.htm>
- <URL:http://www.mandt.com/tcltk/tcltoc.html>
-
- The paperback book covers Tcl 7.5b1 and Tk 4.1b1. It focuses on
- creating and debugging cross-platform graphical applications. Windows
- and Unix development is covered. The book comes with a CD-ROM
- containing Tcl/Tk sources, a binary Tcl/Tk version for Windows, the
- book's source code and Tcl freeware, such as ObjectTcl, Tix4.0,
- TkSteal, adaTCL7.3, BLT-1.8, dlwish, debuggers, Spectcl-01a,
- GuiBuilder, XF 2.3, and other things such as expect, games, graphics,
- internet related items, media, etc.
-
- *Second edition:
- Author: Eric Foster-Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: M&T Books
- Publication date: October, 1997
- ISBN: 1-55851-569-0
- Pages: 374
- Price: $39.95 US
-
-
-
- 13. Title: Bots and Other Internet Beasties Book/CD Package
- Author: Joseph Williams
- Publisher: SAMS
- Publication date: May 1996
- ISBN: 1575210169
- Pages: 500
- Price: $49.99 US
-
- Book covers internet robots, spiders, worms, and other agents.
- Covers software written in Tcl/Tk.
-
- 14. Title: RedHat Linux Unleashed Book/CD Package
- Author: Kamran Husain, et al
- Publisher: SAMS
- Publication date: July 1996
- ISBN: 0672309629
- Pages: 1040
- Price: $49.99 US
-
- Book covers the Linux OS/Environment. This includes Tcl/Tk as well as many
- other subjects.
-
- 15. Title: Tricks of the Java Programming Gurus
- Author: Glenn Vanderburg
- Publisher: SAMS.NET
- Publication date: July 1996
- ISBN: 1-57521-102-5
- Price: $39.99 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.mcp.com/samsnet/books/102-5/102-5.html>
-
- This book is primarily a book about advanced Java techniques. However,
- there's a chapter on the ability to embed a Tcl interpreter into a Java
- application using a native method library under Unix, as well as info
- on ways that Tcl might be useful for a Java application.
-
- 16. Title: The Visual TCL Handbook, 1/e
- Author: David Young <URL:mailto:david@inforef.com>
- Publisher: Prentice Hall
- Publication date: August 1996
- ISBN: 0-13-461674-X
- Pages: 400
- Price: $42.00 US
-
- A comprehensive guide to Visual TCL. This book leads reader from basic
- graphical user interface development concepts to meaningful application
- development. The book focuses on the TCLX and VT extensions,
- addressing many fundamental TCL topics. The entire TCL language is
- documented in a separate Commands section. Comes with a CD-ROM that
- includes SGI, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX and Unixware versions of Visual Tcl.
-
- 17. Title: Running LINUX
- Author: Matt Welsh & Lar Kaufman
- Publisher: O'REILLY AND ASSOCIATES
- Publication date: August 1996
- ISBN: 1-56592-151-8
- Pages: 650
- Price: $29.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/runux2/noframes.html>
-
- Deals with Linux administration. Has a chapter on programming using
- C, C++, Perl, Tcl/Tk. A companion product containing a CD-ROM is available.
-
- 18. Title: Understanding OSF DCE 1.1 For AIX and OS/2
- Author: Rolf Lendenmann
- Publisher: PTR Prentice Hall
- Publication date: August 1996
- ISBN: 0-13-493750-3
- Pages: 312
- Price: $36.00 US
-
- This book teachs OSF's Distributed Computing Environment. It covers
- many aspects of DCE and teaches how to create control scripts and RPC
- programs using Tcl, RPCs, and threads.
-
- 19. Title: LINUX Companion: The Essential Guide for Users and
- System Administrators, 1/e
- Author: Mark F. Komarinski
- Publisher: PTR Prentice Hall
- Publication date: August 1996
- ISBN: 0-13-231838-5
- Pages: 208
- Price: $24.95 US
-
- This book covers a lot of information about Linux. Chapter 11 is
- the development tools chapter, and gcc, g++, Perl and Tcl/Tk are
- covered.
-
- 20. Title: Beginning Linux Programming
- Author: Neil Matthew, Richard Stones
- Publisher: Wrox Press Ltd.
- Publication date: September 1996
- ISBN: 1-874416-68-0
- Price: $36.95 US
- Pages: 700
-
- Introduction to various types of programming tools. Includes a chapter
- on programming in Tcl/Tk. Supposedly it will be followed by Instant,
- Revolutionary, and Master Class editions. Source code supposedly available
- on WWW.
-
- 21. Title: CGI Bible
- Author: Ed Titel <URL:mailto:etittel@lanw.com>
- Mark Gaither <URL:mailto:markg@hal.com>
- Sebastian Hassinger <URL:mailto:singe@outer.net>
- Mike Erwin <URL:mailto:mikee@outer.net>
- Publisher: IDG Books Worldwide
- Publication date: December 1996
- ISBN: 0-76458-016-7
- Pages: 618
- Price: $ 49.99 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.idgbooks.com/database/book_result.msql?isbn=0-7645-8016-7>
-
- This book is a paperback with CD-ROM. It covers HTTP and HTML briefly,
- SGML and HTML DTDs (and validation), HTML 3.0, CGI (including the various
- languages which can be used, mentioning Tcl), then proceeds on to the
- topic of the design of CGI applications (using perl 4 - shudder).
-
- 22. Title: Tcl & Tk Reference Card
- Publisher: Specialized Systems Consultants
- Publication date: December 1996
- ISBN: 0-91615-180-8
- Price: $4.50 US
- <URL:https://www.ssc.com/cgi-bin/svend/#refs>
-
- Tcl cards cover Tcl 7.3.
- Tk cards cover Tk 4.0.
-
- 23. Title: Tcl Reference Card
- Author: Michael K. Johnson
- Publisher: Specialized Systems Consultants
- Publication date: December 1996
- ISBN: 0-91615-186-7
- Price: $3.00 US
- <URL:https://www.ssc.com/cgi-bin/svend/#refs>
-
- Tcl cards cover Tcl 7.3.
-
- 24. Title: Tk Reference Card
- Author: Michael K. Johnson
- Publisher: Specialized Systems Consultants
- Publication date: December 1996
- ISBN: 0-91615-185-9
- Price: $3.00 US
- <URL:https://www.ssc.com/cgi-bin/svend/#refs>
-
- Tk cards cover Tk 4.0.
-
- 25. Title: Linux Programming
- Author: Patrick Volkerding,
- Eric Foster-Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>,
- Kevin Reichard
- Publisher: M&T Books
- Publication date: January 1997
- ISBN: 1-55828-507-5
- Price: $39.96 US
-
- This book and CD-ROM covers every major programming tool available for Linux,
- including Tk.
-
- 26. Title: Mastering Regular Expressions
- Author: Jeffrey Friedl <URL:mailto:jfriedl@omron.co.jp>
- Publisher: O'Reilly & Assoc.
- Publication date: January, 1997
- ISBN: 1-56592-257-3
- Pages: 368
- Price: $29.95 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/regex/>
- <URL:http://enterprise.ic.gc.ca/%7Ejfriedl/regex/>
-
- This book explains regular expressions in general, and then covers a number
- of different tools explaining specialized variations. Tcl is one of the
- tools covered in it's own chapter.
-
- 27. Title: Cookbook for Serving the Internet: UNIX Version, 1/e
- Author: Philip E. Bourne
- Publisher: PTR Prentice Hall
- Publication date: February 1997
- ISBN: 0-13-519992-1
- Pages: 336
- Price: $29.95 US
-
- This book is intended to help one set up their own internet information
- server. Covers where to find the software tools needed, how to design the
- structure of the information server, how to decide what information
- to upload, plan the use of graphics, how to write interactive forms,
- when to do custom programming in Perl or Tcl, etc.
-
- 28. Title: CGI Developer's Resource: Web Programming in Tcl and Perl
- Authors: J.M. Ivler <URL:mailto:ivler@i-xpress.com>
- Kamran Husain
- Publisher: Prentice Hall Computer Books
- Publication date: March 1997
- ISBN: 0-13-727751-2
- Pages: 624
- Price: $49.95 US
- <URL:http://www.net-quest.com/%7Eivler/cgibook/>
-
- This book is a paperback with a CD-ROM. It contains complete program
- examples. The write up describes this book as covering a methodology
- of the analysis, design and coding of enterprise-wide CGI scripts in
- both Tcl and Perl. All source from the book, as well as valuable
- programming tools, are contained on the CD-ROM.
-
- 29. Title: Tcl/Tk for Dummies (For Dummies)
- Author: Timothy Webster
- Publisher: IDG Books Worldwide
- Publication date: April 1997
- ISBN: 0-76450-152-6
- Price: $29.99 US
-
- Another one of the series of programming books.
-
- 30. Title: Effective Tcl: Writing Better Programs in Tcl and Tk
- Author: Mark Harrison and Michael J. McLennan <URL:mailto:mmclennan@lucent.com>
- Publisher: Addison-Wesley
- Publication date: December 1997
- ISBN: 0-20-163474-0
- Price: $38.68 US
-
- This one is not yet available.
-
- The synopsis from the publisher is:
-
- Take the next step with Tcl/Tk development with this practical
- programming style guide. The Tcl scripting language and the Tk toolkit
- together create a programming environment for creating graphical user
- interfaces under the X Window System and MS Windows 95/NT. This book
- offers a wealth of practical information on how to exploit the full
- potential of this remarkable programming environment.
-
- 31. Title: Database Backed Web Sites
- Author: Philip Greenspun <URL:mailto:philg@martigny.ai.mit.edu>
- Publisher: Ziff-Davis Press
- Publication date: May 1997
- ISBN: 1-56276-530-2
- Price: $29.95 US
- WWW site: <URL:http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/wtr/dead-trees/>
- <URL:http://demo.webho.com/>
-
- A new book on how to think about your Web publishing philosophy, make
- money (shudder), and build RDBMS-backed Web sites. This book will
- contain lots of examples of using the AOLserver, Tcl and RDBMS.
-
- 32. Title: Tcl/Tk Tools
- Editor: Mark Harrison
- Publisher: O'Reilly & Assoc.
- Publication date: August 1997
- ISBN: 1-56592-218-2
- Pages: 678
- Price: $49.95 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/tcltools/>
-
- This is a paperback with CD-ROM. The book covers the various
- Tcl extensions such as BLT, ET, expect, GroupKit, [incr Tcl], [incr Tk],
- [incr Widgets], MTtcl, Oratcl, Sybtcl, TCL-DP, TclX, Tix, TKReplay, Tree,
- TSIPP, and many other topics, such as info on configuration
- and debugging Tcl/Tk. Binaries for Linux and Solaris platforms,
- as well as source, appear on the CD-ROM.
-
- 33. Title: Mobile Agents: Explanations and Example
- Authors: William R. Cockayne <URL:mailto:cockayne@acm.org> and
- Michael Zyda <URL:mailto:zyda@siggraph.org>
- Publisher: Manning Publications
- Publication date: September 1997
- ISBN: 1-884777-36-8
- Pages: 250
- Price: $42.00 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.manning.com/Cockayne/>
-
- Paperback with CD-ROM
-
- Book covers the technology to create mobile agents via various
- mechanisms, including Agent Tcl, Telescript, Ara, Aglest Workbench.
- Includes software to allow the reader to create and use mobile agents
- on the internet.
-
- 34. Title: The Pattern Recognition Basis of Artificial Intelligence
- Author: Donald Tveter <URL:mailto:drt@mcs.com>
- Publisher: IEEE
- Publication date: August 1997
- ISBN: 0-8186-7796-1
- Pages: 350
- Price: $46.00 US
- WWW information: <URL:http://www.computer.org/cspress/catalog/bp07796.htm>
- Examples: <URL:http://www.mcs.net/%7Edrt/basisofai.html>
-
- An introduction to artificial intelligence. At least one of the software
- packages described in the book is written in Tcl/Tk and is available
- for Unix, DOS and Windows 3.x.
-
- 35. Title: Interactive Web Applications With Tcl/Tk
- Authors: Michael Doyle
- Hattie Schroeder
- Publisher: Ap Professional
- Publication date: January 1998
- ISBN: 0122215400
- Price: $39.95 US
-
- Paperback with CD-ROM.
- This is to be a learning by example book, for folk who know a bit of
- programming, but are not experts. It is to cover developing applets as
- well as stand-alone applications and simple server applications. It
- is platform neutral.
-
- 36. Title: Tcl Tk Workshop Proceedings, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- Subtitle: NR Edition
- Publisher: Usenix Assoc.
- Publication date: July 1995
- ISBN: 1880446723
- Price: $34.00 US
-
- This is the proceedings from the 1995 workshop. The Usenix folk also
- have the proceedings for the 1996 and 1997 workshops for sale as well.
-
- 37. Title: Professional Java Fundamentals
- Authors: Shy Cohen
- Publisher: Wrox Press
- ISBN: 1-861000-38-3
- Pages: 500
- Price: $39.95
-
- Describes the shell, unix, terminal and curses environment, a variety
- of Java issues, and Tcl programming. Why? I have no idea.
-
- 38. Title: Effektives Programmieren mit Perl5
- Author: Michael Schilling
- Publisher: Addison-Wesley
- ISBN: 3-8273-1095-4
- Price: DM59,90
- WWW info: <URL:http://www.addison-wesley.de/>
-
- Available only in German, this book and CD-ROM covers Perl 5, OO-Perl,
- Perl/Tk, Perl and the Internet, and more.
-
- 39. Title: Cross-Platform Perl
- Author: Eric F. Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: M&T Books <URL:http://www.mispress.com/>
- ISBN: 1-55851-483-X
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/perlbook.htm>
- Errata: <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/perlbook.htm#Errata>
-
- Focuses on writing cross-platform perl applications. Covers Perl on
- Windows NT and Unix. It also covers Perl/Tk as well as other Perl
- add-on modules for writing CGI, etc. Comes with a CD-ROM containing
- the Perl 5.002 source code, a binary version of Perl 5.001 for Windows 95
- and Windows NT, sources from the book examples and various Perl freeware.
-
- 40. Title: UNIX Programming Tools
- Author: Eric F. Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: M&T Books <URL:http://www.mispress.com/>
- ISBN: 1-55851-482-1
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/unixprog.htm>
- Errata: <URL:http://www.pconline.com/%7Eerc/unixprog.htm#Errata>
-
- This book`s focus is teaching one how to use Unix to do programming.
- However, a discussion of Perl and Tcl as interpreters is present, and the
- CD-ROM includes Tcl 7.6 and Tk 4.2, as well as many other pieces of
- software useful when programming on Unix (gcc, Java, LessTif, tkdiff,
- Cocoon, cxref, Perl 5.003, emacs, tkedit, vim, CVS, gdb/tk and other
- tools).
-
- 41. Title: Linux Configuration and Installation, Second Edition
- Authors: Patrick Volkerding,
- Kevin Reichard, and
- Eric F. Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: MIS: Press
- Publication date: 1996
- ISBN: 1-55828-492-3
-
- Comes with 2 CD-ROMs. Has a brief introduction to Tcl in the section on
- programming. CD-ROM has Tcl/Tk along with a lot of other tools on it.
- The CD-ROM was recently updated to include Slackware 3.2.
-
- 42. Title: Advanced Perl Programming
- Author: Sriram Srinivasan
- Publisher: O'Reilly
- Publication date: August 1997
- ISBN: 1-56592-220-4
- Pages: 434
- Price: $34.95 US
-
- Covers objects, network programming, databases, and other topics, such as
- two chapters on Perl/Tk.
-
- 43. Title: Programming Python
- Subtitle: Object-Oriented Scripting
- Author: Mark Lutz <URL:mailto:lutz@rmi.net>
- Publisher: O'Reilly
- Publication date: October 1996
- ISBN: 1-56592-197-6
- Pages: 904
- Price: $44.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/python/>
- Errata: <URL:http://shell.rmi.net/%7Elutz/errata.html>
-
- Book (and CD-ROM) covers the use of the Python programming language. The
- book is full of running examples (all of which come on the CD-ROM).
- CD-ROM also contains versions of Python for all major UNIX, Windows,
- Windows NT, and Macintosh platforms. There are a few hundred pages
- that use python's Tkinter interface to Tk.
-
- 44. Title: Web Client Programming with Perl
- Subtitle: Automating Tasks on the Web
- Author: Clinton Wong
- Publisher: O'Reilly
- Publication date: March 1997
- ISBN: 1-56592-214-X
- Pages: 228
- Price: $29.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.ora.com/catalog/webclient/>
- Book's examples:
-
- Discusses extended your Perl scripting abilities to the WWW.
- A section on Tk including two or three examples is included.
-
- 45. Title: Tcl/Tk Unleashed (Unleashed)
- Authors: Red Hat Press
- Publisher: Sams Publishing
- Publication date: September, 1997
- ISBN: 0672311437
- Pages: 1100
- Price: $49.99 US
- WWW book information:
- Book's examples:
- Errata:
-
- This is a paperback with CD-ROM.
-
- 46. Title: Cookbook for Serving the Internet, A: UNIX Version, 1/e
- Authors: Philip E. Bourne
- Publisher: Prentice Hall PTR
- Publication date: Feb, 1997
- ISBN: 0135199921
- Price: $29.95 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://merchant.superlibrary.com:8000/catalog/hg/PRODUCT/PAGE/01351/bud/0135199921.html>
- Book's examples:
- Errata:
-
- This ook focuses on what it takes to build your ownUNIX based internet
- information server. The publisher's paragraph indicates that you will
- learn what can be accomplished with standard tools and
- what requires custom programming in languages like Perl and Tcl.
- I don't know yet how much Tcl is actuall mentioned in the book.
-
-
- xx.
-
- Title:
- Subtitle:
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- Publication date:
- Nth Printing:
- ISBN:
- Pages:
- Price:
- WWW book information:
- Book's examples:
- Errata:
-
-
- 99. Rumored to be in the works:
-
- International Thomson Publishing is producing a new
- series of books called "The Road to ...". One of these will be "The
- Road to Tcl/Tk". It will be a bit like a travel guide, covering the
- essentials, hints and tips, with longer worked examples. The author
- will be passing on the experience gained while writing Tcl/Tk. It will
- be asssuming Tcl 8.0.
-
- Other documentation includes:
-
- 1. Many people learn Tcl/Tk from reading the 'man' pages. These files,
- a part of the source code distribution, are mentioned in Dr. Ousterhout's
- book as 'the reference manual'. If the person who installed Tcl/Tk at
- your site did a build of the executables and then ran the 'make install'
- step described in the source code distribution, the man pages are probably
- installed on your system in a directory. Contact your system adminstrator
- for more details. Also, (see "tcl-faq/part2") for a number of WWW resources
- which provide additional information about many aspects of Tcl and it's
- extensions. See the other FAQs mentioned in this document for additional
- help, pointers to software examples, and other resources from which you
- can draw help. For instance, (see "tcl-faq/bibliography/part1") for details
- of published books, magazine and journal articles, proceedings papers, and
- thesises relating to the Tcl family of languages.
- (See "tcl-faq/commercial-uses/part3") for details of classes offered
- commercially.
-
- 2. For a list of free resources, (see "tcl-faq/part3") which has an
- entry for a variety of resources.
-
- 3. Computerized Processes Unlimited has a combined Tcl/Tclx reference
- manual for sale. (See "commercial-uses/part3") for more information.
-
- 4. The USENIX Association <URL:http://www.usenix.org/> not only
- sponsers various conferences and workshops of possible interest to the
- Tcl and Tk communities, but also offers the proceedings from those
- sessions for sale to members. See
- <URL:http://www.usenix.org/cgi-bin/lookbib.pl?raw=false&TERMS=tcl> for
- an example of just some of the articles that have been published by the
- USENIX Association.
-
- 5. Title: Tcl/Tk Documents
- Author: J. Ousterhout
- Publisher: Northside Copy Central
- 1862 Euclid
- Berkeley, CA
- Voice: (510) 849-9600
- Price: approx. $15-$20 US
-
- 6. Title: Tcl/Tk Reference
- Author: J. Ousterhout <URL:mailto:john.ousterhout@eng.sun.com>
- Publisher: Cheap Bytes
- P.O. Box 2714
- Lodi, CA 95241
- U.S.A.
- Pages: 700
- Price: $19.00 US
- WWW book information: <URL:http://www.cheapbytes.com/>
-
- This contains the complete man pages for Tcl 7.4/Tk 4.0, along with two indexes.
-
- 7. Title: Porting to Java
- Author: New Riders Development Group
- Publisher: NEW RIDER'S PRESS
- Publication date: 1996
- ISBN: 1562056026
- Price: $45.00 US
-
- The book includes applet converter scripts and covers Tcl/Tk, C,
- C shell and Perl conversion techniques. It explains usage for each
- Java class distributed by SUN in the Java Developer's Toolkit.
-
- I can't find any specifics on whether this actually was published or not
-
- 8. Title: Distributed objects : neural network architecture rendered in
- Tcl-DP and Tcl widgets
- Author: Mark A. Stewart
- Publisher: Thesis (M.S.) University of Alabam at Birmingham
- Publication date: 1995
- LoC: QA76.27.T41
-
- The topic is computer network architectures and neural networks.
-
- 9: Title: TCL and TK Reference Manual
- Author: Barnes
- Publisher: Linux System Labs
- ISBN: 1-88532-908-3
-
- No other information available.
-
- 10. Title: Tcl
- Author: Kelvin Corocran
- Publisher: Small Pr Distribution
- Publication date: December 1989
- ISBN: 1-85298-010-9
- Price: $8.00 US
-
- No other information available.
-
- 11. Title: Tcl and the Tk Toolkit
- Author: John K. Ousterhout
- Publisher: Specialized Systems Consultants
- Publication date: December 1996
- ISBN: 9997887492
-
- No other information available.
-
- 12. Title: TCL/TK Unleashed; With CDROM
- Publisher: Sams
- Publication date: Sept 1997
- ISBN: 0672311437
- Price: $49.99 US
-
- No other information available.
-
- 13. Title: Perl 5 How-To
- Author: Aidan Humphreys, Mike Glover, Ed Weiss
- Publisher: Waite Group
- Publication Date: Jun-96
- ISBN: 1-57169-058-1
- Retail Price: 49.99 US
-
- Said to contain a chapter on perl/Tk programming.
-
- 14. Title: Perl 5 Interactive Course
- Author: Jon Orwant
- Publisher: Waite Group
- Publication Date: Sep-96
- ISBN: 1-57169-064-6
- Retail Price: 49.99 US
-
- Said to include a chapter on perl Tk.
-
- 15. Title: Web Tcl Complete
- Author: Steve Ball <URL:mailto:Steve.Ball@tcltk.anu.edu.au>
- Publisher: McGraw-Hill
-
- The author states:
-
- The book will be covering all aspects of Web programming: from
- server-side CGI scripting and microscripting through to client-side
- Tclets and hyperpage scripting, with some general network programming
- thrown in for good measure.
-
- I plan on including lots of example scripts, but probably not much C
- code - this is 100% Pure Tcl(TM) - which will provide a coherent
- collection of applications and libraries. I'll also include examples
- of code reuse; for server- and client-side processing of forms for
- example.
-
- I will be making at least some of the book's programs and drafts
- available on the Plume Web site - so watch out for it!
-
- I will certainly be including as much information on programming that I
- can in the book.
-
- 16. The Perl Journal
- ISBN: 1087-903X
- WWW info: <URL:http://orwant.www.media.mit.edu/tpj/top>
- Price: $18 US/year for U.S. delivery
- $25 US/year for foreign delivery,
-
- The Perl Journal is a quarterly publication devoted to discussing the
- Perl language and extensions. A regular column on the perl Tk
- extension has been appearing and is an excellent source of information
- about the extension.
-
- 17. Title: Learning Perl/Tk (working title)
- Author: Nancy Walsh <URL:mailto:nwalsh@rtd.com>
- Publisher: O'Reilly's
- Publication date: 1998
-
- This book, still in process, will cover the basic widgets, covers
- event driven programming, snippets of code, and a number of complete
- program examples. Designed to be read by a new Perl Tk programmer
- as well as to be used as a reference.
-
- 18. Title: Tcl/Tk Unleashed; With Cdrom
- Publish: Sams
- Publication date: September 1997
- ISBN: 0-67231-143-7
- Price: $49.99
-
- No further information available at this time
-
- 19. Python/Tk book
-
- A book that discusses the Python/Tk environment, how to use it to
- create useful software, doing rapid application development with Python/Tk
- and other useful libraries, and finally a series of graphically oriented
- applications is in process. Watch
- <URL:http://www.pythonware.com/fredrik/orabook.htm> for future details.
-
- 20. Title: Cross-Platform Perl
- Author: Eric F. Johnson <URL:mailto:johnsone@camax.com>
- Publisher: M & T Books
- Publication date: September 1996
- ISBN: 155851483X
- Price: $34.95
-
- I've been told there is an extensive section of Perl/Tk in this book.
-
- 21. Title: Handbook of Programming Languages, volume 2
- Publisher: Macmillan
- Publication date: March 1998
-
- General coverage of many languages, including Tcl.
-
- xx.
-
- Title:
- Subtitle:
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- Publication date:
- Nth Printing:
- ISBN:
- Pages:
- Price:
- WWW book information:
- Book's examples:
- Errata:
-
-
- ---
-
- B. Training courses, etc.
-
- 1. (See "commercial-uses/part3") for information about training
- courses by Computerized Processes Unlimited, NeoSoft Communications
- Services, and ATT training groups.
-
- 2. The first Tcl local users' group has formed in the Dallas Texas
- area. The group will be known as "Tcl Dallas" or "Tcl'D" for short.
- "Tcl Dallas" is a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of
- the Tcl language along with its many extensions. As a local users
- group, "Tcl Dallas" supports the regional Tcl developer community by
- hosting special events and providing a local forum for the discussion
- of Tcl issues. For further information, see their WWW page at
- <URL:http://www.tcltk.com/TclDallas/>.
-
- 3. An IRC channel dedicated to the discussion of Tcl/Tk has been created.
- #TCL has been created by Noob Saibot <URL:mailto:noob@america.com>.
-
- 4. The course "The Internet Introduction to Tcl/Tk" is being offered over
- the WWW. Cost is $325, and covers a series of learning modules, supplementary
- materials, and access to an e-mail mailing list on which the instructor and
- fellow students correspond. See
- <URL:http://www.skillshare.com/skillshare/dr/tcl-intro.html> for more
- details. Contact J Adrian Zimmer <URL:mailto:jazimmer@acm.org> to register.
- The course can also be taught on-site or via telephone conferencing. Again,
- contact Adrian for details.
-
- 5. Another Tcl user group is being considered in the Raleigh, North Carolina
- area. It is to be called the Triangle Area Tcl/Tk User Group (TTUG).
- Krishna Vedati <URL:mailto:kvedati@rational.com> is the person who
- is interested in forming this. Contact Krishna for more details.
-
-
- ---
-
- C. Time-related seminars, conferences, workshops.
-
- 1. There have been, in the past, seminars and BOFs/SIGs at Usenix, the MIT X
- conference, and other conferences taught by John Ousterhout and others
- on Tcl and Tk.
- (See also "tcl-faq/part2") for the URL to the slides from the most recent
- of these presentations by John.
-
- If you are planning on attending a conference, check for these types
- of activies, as well as sessions dealing with applicatons of Tcl/Tk.
- Let the others in <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> know about the event so that others
- might also attend. For that matter, consider scheduling a Tcl/Tk
- event yourself if you are so inclined!
-
- 2. University of Maryland Baltimore County has been holding a course titled
- CMSC491C - Special Topics in Computer Science - Scripting Languages.
- This is an introduction to scripting languages with an emphasis on Perl and
- Tcl, but also mentioning sed, awk, etc. Taught by Bob Tarr.
- Call (410) 455-2336 (Continuing
- Education Department) to sign up as a special non-degree candidate.
- Info provided by <URL:mailto:finin@cs.umbc.edu> (Tim Finin).
-
- 3. The Cooperative Research Centre for Advanced Computational Systems,
- at the Australian National University, Canberra Australia, has been
- offering Introductory and Advanced Tcl/Tk courses. The first course,
- "An Introduction To the Tcl Language and Tk Toolkit", was held from
- 29th November to 1st December 1995. Courses will be conducted on a
- regular basis.
-
- For the latest information, see
- <URL:http://pastime.anu.edu.au/tcl/Courses.html>.
-
- 4. CPU is offering an "Introduction to Programming in Tcl/Tk" during the
- week of 06-Oct-97. For more information, see
- <URL:http://www.cpu.com/> or send mail to
- <URL:mailto:info@cpu.com>.
-
- 5. See <URL:http://www.tcltk.com/training/> for details of several
- Tcl/Tk and [incr Tcl] classes being conducted by Bell Labs Training.
- Contact Lynn Rogers at (610)712-2333 for more details.
-
- 6. The Sixth International Python Conference will be held October 14-17, 1997.
- See <URL:http://www.python.org/workshops/1997-10/> for more details. I
- believe Python/Tk topics will be covered, as well as a tutorial on SWIG
- and other goodies.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: FAQ General information
- Subject: -VI- Where do I report problems, bugs, or enhancements
-
- There are two alternatives for reporting bugs and problems.
- The first is the Usenet news group <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl>, an
- unmoderated Usenet newsgroup, created for the discussion of the Tcl
- programming language and tools that use some form of Tcl, such as the
- Tk toolkit for the X window system, Extended Tcl, and expect. Please
- note that postings of source code to <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> does not
- automatically get archived on <URL:ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/languages/tcl/>
- (in the User Contributions archive site) - if you want your code to
- be available, you will need to make arrangements with the folks there
- to have it added. See elsewhere in the FAQ for more details on the
- user contrib archive site.
-
- The second alternative would be to report problems, suggestions, new
- ideas, etc. directly to the author. Email to
- <URL:mailto:John.Ousterhout@eng.sun.com> (John Ousterhout) will reach
- the author of Tcl and Tk; to find the email address of the authors of
- other Tcl/Tk based programs, (see "tcl-faq/part4"), and (see
- "tcl-faq/part5"). Note that John has asked folks to PLEASE use
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl> for public communications.
-
- When you report bugs, be sure you mention what hardware and operating
- system you are using (e.g. Pentium 100 mhz running Linux version x.y.z), what
- version of tcl/tk you are using (e.g. Tcl 7.6p2/Tk 4.2p2), what extensions
- you have added (e.g. tclX, dash, plus, itcl, tix, and blt), and any local
- modifications you have made. Then, provide if possible either a small piece
- of code, or a URL (e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.myhost.com/some/path/stuff.tcl> )
- to some code which demonstrates the problem. Either have the code explicitly
- mention here's what I thought would happen, or in your description mention
- that. Also, if something used to work, mention which configuration you
- used. Most of all, be sure to provide an email address that is valid,
- and be sure to watch the usenet newsgroups for responses, since seldom will
- folk send private email on a matter which likely is of public interest.
- On the other hand, if you DO get private email replies, remember to
- post a summary of what works to the group, so that future generations can
- benefit from your learning experience. If something in Tcl fails, don't
- just say "Tcl_Eval() fails" (or whatever function) but tell folk specifically
- what type of core dump occured, or what error codes were returned, what
- values were left in $errorCode and interp->result, and so on.
-
- If you have software from which you think someone might benefit
- (either a program, function, extension, or simple example), or you have
- a document, magazine or journal article, thesis, project, or even
- commercial advertisement, be sure to let the appropriate folks know.
- There are FAQ maintainers for each of these areas as well as a
- <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl.announce> newsgroup you can use. Source code
- postings of reasonable length (and reasonable has been pretty large)
- are acceptable, BUT postings are _not_ automatically archived on the
- neosoft ftp site. It is always worthwhile to submit your contributions
- directly to the ftp site so more folk in the future can benefit from your
- experience. To make announcements to the <URL:news:comp.lang.tcl.announce>
- newsgroup, send email with the details to
- <URL:mailto:tcl-announce@mitchell.org>. Also, feel free to just point folk
- at your own ftp site or WWW site if you have one which can be used. Folk
- should not feel compelled to keep everything on one site - but should feel
- free to ftp contributions there if they wish.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of comp.lang.tcl Frequently Asked Questions (1/5)
- *****************************************************
- --
- Larry W. Virden INET: lvirden@cas.org
- <URL:http://www.teraform.com/%7Elvirden/> <*> O- "We are all Kosh."
- Unless explicitly stated to the contrary, nothing in this posting should
- be construed as representing my employer's opinions.
-
- [[Send Tcl/Tk announcements to tcl-announce@mitchell.org
- Send administrivia to tcl-announce-request@mitchell.org
- Announcements archived at http://www.xpi.com/tcl/comp.lang.tcl.announce/
- The primary Tcl/Tk archive is ftp://ftp.neosoft.com/pub/tcl/ ]]
-
-