State of the interpreter - info
There are a number of subcommands to the info
command that provide information about the
current state of the interpreter. These commands provide access to
information like the current version and patchlevel, what script is
currently being executed, how many commands have been executed, or
how far down in the call tree the current proc is executing.
The info
tclversion
and info
patchlevel
can be used to find out if the
revision level of the interpreter running your code has the support
for features you are using. If you know that certain features are
not available in certain revisions of the interpreter, you can
define your own procs to handle this, or just exit the program with
an error message.
The info
cmdcount
and info
level
can be used while optimizing a Tcl script
to find out how many levels and commands were necessary to
accomplish a function.
Note that the pid
command is not
part of the info
command, but a
command in its own right.
Subcommands that return information about the current state of the interpreter
(Note: There are several other subcommands that can be useful at times)
info
cmdcount
- Returns the total number of commands that have been executed by this interpreter.
info
level
?number?
- Returns the stack level at which the compiler is currently
evaluating code. 0 is the top level, 1 is a proc called from top, 2
is a proc called from a proc, etc.
If
number
is a positive value,info
level
returns a the name and arguments of the proc at that level on the stack.Number
is that same value thatinfo
level
would return if it were called in the proc being referenced.If
number
number is a negative value, it refers to the current level plusnumber
. Thus,info
level
returns a the name and arguments of the proc at that level on the stack. info
patchlevel
- Returns the value of the global variable tcl_patchlevel. This is a three-levels version number identifying the Tcl version, like: "8.4.6"
info
script
- Returns the name of the file currently being evaluated, if one
is being evaluated. If there is no file being evaluated, returns an
empty string.
This can be used for instance to determine the directory holding other scripts or files of interest (they often live in the same directory or in a related directory), without having to hardcode the paths.
info
tclversion
- Returns the value of the global variable tcl_version. This is the revision number of this interpreter, like: "8.4".
pid
- Returns the process id of the current process.
Example
puts "This is how many commands have been executed: [info cmdcount]" puts "Now *THIS* many commands have been executed: [info cmdcount]" puts "\nThis interpreter is revision level: [info tclversion]" puts "This interpreter is at patch level: [info patchlevel]" puts "The process id for this program is [pid]" proc factorial {val} { puts "Current level: [info level] - val: $val" set lvl [info level] if {$lvl == $val} { return $val } return [expr {($val-$lvl) * [factorial $val]]}] } set count1 [info cmdcount] set fact [factorial 3] set count2 [info cmdcount] puts "The factorial of 3 is $fact" puts "Before calling the factorial proc, $count1 commands had been executed" puts "After calling the factorial proc, $count2 commands had been executed" puts "It took [expr $count2-$count1] commands to calculate this factorial" # # Use [info script] to determine where the other files of interest # reside # set sysdir [file root [info script]] source [file join $sysdir "utils.tcl"]