Tcl_DictObj(3) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_DictObj(3)

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NAME


Tcl_NewDictObj, Tcl_DictObjPut, Tcl_DictObjGet, Tcl_DictObjRemove,
Tcl_DictObjSize, Tcl_DictObjFirst, Tcl_DictObjNext, Tcl_DictObjDone,
Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList, Tcl_DictObjRemoveKeyList - manipulate Tcl
values as dictionaries

SYNOPSIS


#include <tcl.h>

Tcl_Obj *
Tcl_NewDictObj()

int
Tcl_DictObjGet(interp, dictPtr, keyPtr, valuePtrPtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjPut(interp, dictPtr, keyPtr, valuePtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjRemove(interp, dictPtr, keyPtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjSize(interp, dictPtr, sizePtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjFirst(interp, dictPtr, searchPtr,
keyPtrPtr, valuePtrPtr, donePtr)

void
Tcl_DictObjNext(searchPtr, keyPtrPtr, valuePtrPtr, donePtr)

void
Tcl_DictObjDone(searchPtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList(interp, dictPtr, keyc, keyv, valuePtr)

int
Tcl_DictObjRemoveKeyList(interp, dictPtr, keyc, keyv)

ARGUMENTS


Tcl_Interp *interp (in) If an error occurs while
converting a value to be a
dictionary value, an error
message is left in the
interpreter's result value
unless interp is NULL.

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

Tcl_Obj *keyPtr (in) Points to the key for the
key/value pair being
manipulated within the
dictionary value.

Tcl_Obj **keyPtrPtr (out) Points to a variable that
will have the key from a
key/value pair placed
within it. May be NULL to
indicate that the caller
is not interested in the
key.

Tcl_Obj *valuePtr (in) Points to the value for
the key/value pair being
manipulated within the
dictionary value (or sub-
value, in the case of
Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList.)

Tcl_Obj **valuePtrPtr (out) Points to a variable that
will have the value from a
key/value pair placed
within it. For
Tcl_DictObjFirst and
Tcl_DictObjNext, this may
be NULL to indicate that
the caller is not
interested in the value.

int *sizePtr (out) Points to a variable that
will have the number of
key/value pairs contained
within the dictionary
placed within it.

Tcl_DictSearch *searchPtr (in/out) Pointer to record to use
to keep track of progress
in enumerating all
key/value pairs in a
dictionary. The contents
of the record will be
initialized by the call to
Tcl_DictObjFirst. If the
enumerating is to be
terminated before all
values in the dictionary
have been returned, the
search record must be
passed to Tcl_DictObjDone
to enable the internal
locks to be released.

int *donePtr (out) Points to a variable that
will have a non-zero value
written into it when the
enumeration of the
key/value pairs in a
dictionary has completed,
and a zero otherwise.

int keyc (in) Indicates the number of
keys that will be supplied
in the keyv array.

Tcl_Obj *const *keyv (in) Array of keyc pointers to
values that
Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList and
Tcl_DictObjRemoveKeyList
will use to locate the
key/value pair to
manipulate within the sub-
dictionaries of the main
dictionary value passed to
them.
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DESCRIPTION


Tcl dictionary values have an internal representation that supports
efficient mapping from keys to values and which guarantees that the
particular ordering of keys within the dictionary remains the same
modulo any keys being deleted (which removes them from the order) or
added (which adds them to the end of the order). If reinterpreted as
a list, the values at the even-valued indices in the list will be the
keys of the dictionary, and each will be followed (in the odd-valued
index) by the value associated with that key.

The procedures described in this man page are used to create, modify,
index, and iterate over dictionary values from C code.

Tcl_NewDictObj creates a new, empty dictionary value. The string
representation of the value will be invalid, and the reference count
of the value will be zero.

Tcl_DictObjGet looks up the given key within the given dictionary and
writes a pointer to the value associated with that key into the
variable pointed to by valuePtrPtr, or a NULL if the key has no
mapping within the dictionary. The result of this procedure is
TCL_OK, or TCL_ERROR if the dictPtr cannot be converted to a
dictionary.

Tcl_DictObjPut updates the given dictionary so that the given key
maps to the given value; any key may exist at most once in any
particular dictionary. The dictionary must not be shared, but the
key and value may be. This procedure may increase the reference
count of both key and value if it proves necessary to store them.
Neither key nor value should be NULL. The result of this procedure
is TCL_OK, or TCL_ERROR if the dictPtr cannot be converted to a
dictionary.

Tcl_DictObjRemove updates the given dictionary so that the given key
has no mapping to any value. The dictionary must not be shared, but
the key may be. The key actually stored in the dictionary will have
its reference count decremented if it was present. It is not an
error if the key did not previously exist. The result of this
procedure is TCL_OK, or TCL_ERROR if the dictPtr cannot be converted
to a dictionary.

Tcl_DictObjSize updates the given variable with the number of
key/value pairs currently in the given dictionary. The result of this
procedure is TCL_OK, or TCL_ERROR if the dictPtr cannot be converted
to a dictionary.

Tcl_DictObjFirst commences an iteration across all the key/value
pairs in the given dictionary, placing the key and value in the
variables pointed to by the keyPtrPtr and valuePtrPtr arguments
(which may be NULL to indicate that the caller is uninterested in
they key or variable respectively.) The next key/value pair in the
dictionary may be retrieved with Tcl_DictObjNext. Concurrent updates
of the dictionary's internal representation will not modify the
iteration processing unless the dictionary is unshared, when this
will trigger premature termination of the iteration instead (which
Tcl scripts cannot trigger via the dict command.) The searchPtr
argument points to a piece of context that is used to identify which
particular iteration is being performed, and is initialized by the
call to Tcl_DictObjFirst. The donePtr argument points to a variable
that is updated to be zero of there are further key/value pairs to be
iterated over, or non-zero if the iteration is complete. The order
of iteration is implementation-defined. If the dictPtr argument
cannot be converted to a dictionary, Tcl_DictObjFirst returns
TCL_ERROR and the iteration is not commenced, and otherwise it
returns TCL_OK.

When Tcl_DictObjFirst is called upon a dictionary, a lock is placed
on the dictionary to enable that dictionary to be iterated over
safely without regard for whether the dictionary is modified during
the iteration. Because of this, once the iteration over a
dictionary's keys has finished (whether because all values have been
iterated over as indicated by the variable indicated by the donePtr
argument being set to one, or because no further values are required)
the Tcl_DictObjDone function must be called with the same searchPtr
as was passed to Tcl_DictObjFirst so that the internal locks can be
released. Once a particular searchPtr is passed to Tcl_DictObjDone,
passing it to Tcl_DictObjNext (without first initializing it with
Tcl_DictObjFirst) will result in no values being produced and the
variable pointed to by donePtr being set to one. It is safe to call
Tcl_DictObjDone multiple times on the same searchPtr for each call to
Tcl_DictObjFirst.

The procedures Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList and Tcl_DictObjRemoveKeyList are
the close analogues of Tcl_DictObjPut and Tcl_DictObjRemove
respectively, except that instead of working with a single
dictionary, they are designed to operate on a nested tree of
dictionaries, with inner dictionaries stored as values inside outer
dictionaries. The keyc and keyv arguments specify a list of keys
(with outermost keys first) that acts as a path to the key/value pair
to be affected. Note that there is no corresponding operation for
reading a value for a path as this is easy to construct from repeated
use of Tcl_DictObjGet. With Tcl_DictObjPutKeyList, nested
dictionaries are created for non-terminal keys where they do not
already exist. With Tcl_DictObjRemoveKeyList, all non-terminal keys
must exist and have dictionaries as their values.

EXAMPLE


Using the dictionary iteration interface to search determine if there
is a key that maps to itself:

Tcl_DictSearch search;
Tcl_Obj *key, *value;
int done;

/*
* Assume interp and objPtr are parameters. This is the
* idiomatic way to start an iteration over the dictionary; it
* sets a lock on the internal representation that ensures that
* there are no concurrent modification issues when normal
* reference count management is also used. The lock is
* released automatically when the loop is finished, but must
* be released manually when an exceptional exit from the loop
* is performed. However it is safe to try to release the lock
* even if we've finished iterating over the loop.
*/
if (Tcl_DictObjFirst(interp, objPtr, &search,
&key, &value, &done) != TCL_OK) {
return TCL_ERROR;
}
for (; !done ; Tcl_DictObjNext(&search, &key, &value, &done)) {
/*
* Note that strcmp() is not a good way of comparing
* values and is just used here for demonstration
* purposes.
*/
if (!strcmp(Tcl_GetString(key), Tcl_GetString(value))) {
break;
}
}
Tcl_DictObjDone(&search);
Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewBooleanObj(!done));
return TCL_OK;

SEE ALSO


Tcl_NewObj, Tcl_DecrRefCount, Tcl_IncrRefCount, Tcl_InitObjHashTable

KEYWORDS


dict, dict value, dictionary, dictionary value, hash table,
iteration, value

Tcl 8.5 Tcl_DictObj(3)

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