Files in the top-level directory of check-in 5ceb4bf9b1a64c4e
FILE: "/home/joze/src/tclreadline/README"
LAST MODIFICATION: "Thu Dec 16 22:17:39 1999 (joze)"
(C) 1998, 1999 by Johannes Zellner, <johannes@zellner.org>
$Id$
---
tclreadline -- gnu readline for tcl
Copyright (C) 1999 Johannes Zellner
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
<johannes@zellner.org>, http://www.zellner.org/tclreadline/
tclreadline
1. Introduction
---------------
This directory contains the sources and documentation for tclreadline,
which builds a connection between tcl and the gnu readline.
The information here corresponds to release 0.9.
2. Documentation
----------------
The tclreadline.n nroff man page in this release contains the reference
manual entries for tclreadline. If you only want to use tclreadline as
a tool for interactive script development, you don't have to read this
manual page at all. Simply change your .tclshrc according to the section 4.
3. Compiling and installing tclreadline
---------------------------------------
This release will probably only build under UNIX (Linux).
Before trying to compile tclreadline you should do the following things:
(a) Make sure you have tcl 8.0 or higher. I've tested tclreadline
with tcl 8.0.3, 8.0.4, 8.0.5, 8.1.0, 8.1.1 and 8.2.0.
tclreadline relies on a proper tcl installation:
It uses the tclConfig.sh file, which should reside somewhere
in /usr/local/lib/ or /usr/local/lib/tcl8.0/...
(b) Make sure you have gnu readline 2.2 or higher.
tclreadline uses the gnu readline callback handler, which
wasn't implemented in early releases.
(c) The usual ./configure; make; make install sequence should do the rest.
(d) Optionally (or additionally) you can build the executables
tclshrl and / or wishrl which are a readline enhanced replacement
for tclsh and wish. To compile these executable you should type
make tclshrl
or
make wishrl
or
make shells
the latter will compile both shells. To install these shells
you should type
make install-tclshrl
or
make install-wishrl
or
make install-shells
Building these executables is discouraged but necessary
on systems which don't support shared libs.
4. Using tclreadline for interactive tcl scripting.
---------------------------------------------------
copy the sample.tclshrc to $HOME/.tclshrc. If you use another interpreter
like wish, you should copy the file sample.tclshrc to $HOME/.wishrc
(or whatever the manual page of your interpreter says.) If you have
installed tclreadline properly, you are just ready to start:
start your favorite interpreter. The tclreadlineSetup.tcl script
does the rest.
4. History and Changes.
-----------------------
tclreadline-1.0.1: (Sep 1999)
changes:
- tclreadline::readline bell.
Ring the terminal bell, obeying the setting
of bell-style -- audible or visible.
tclreadline-1.0.0: (Sep 1999)
note:
- the script completer procs are written.
this is `sort of a first usable release'.
fixes:
- some minor configure.in fixes.
tclreadline-0.9.3: (Sep 1999)
changes:
- tk completion.
- multiple fallback completion routines for unknown
commands.
- readline reset-terminal sub-function.
fixes:
- another revision of procession events and macros.
includes a hack using a readline's internal
variable _rl_executing_macro.
tclreadline-0.9.2: (Aug 1999)
changes:
- history event `!' expansion on <Tab>
- if tclreadline::historyLength >= 0,
tclreadline::write will truncate the historyfile
to this value.
By default tclreadline::historyfile == -1, that
is no truncation occurs.
- ScriptCompleter largely extended.
calls tclreadline::complete(<cmd>) functions.
- tclreadline::complete(tclreadline_complete_unknown)
- some basic tk completion.
- convenience routines as Menu, CompleteFromList, AttemptFromList
- returning an empty {} will inhibit further
builtin filename completion.
fixes:
- after having at least one character typed, X events
were not processed any more until pressing <return>.
- catching `tclreadline::readline read' errors
in tclreadline::Loop. This was necessary, because
the evaluation of the script completer can return
an error.
tclreadline-0.9.1: (Aug 1999)
changes:
- new variable tclreadline_patchLevel
- tclreadline::Loop takes an optional <historyfile>
fixes:
- tying to fix configure problems.
tclreadline-0.9: (Aug 1999)
changes:
- tclreadline::readline customcompleter
- tclreadline::readline builtincompleter
- tclreadline::readline eofchar
- variable, array and '[' command completion by the script
tclreadline::ScriptCompleter. See the man page or try
typing "puts $env<TAB>" ... Command completion currently only
works, if a '[' preceeds immediately a non-white character.
- the redefinition of the command `cd' was removed due to
multiple requests. This redefinition can be found in the
file `sample.tclshrc' and can be uncommented, if desired.
- the definition of the command `ls' was moved outside the
proc tclreadline::Setup and can be used with the command
namespace import tclreadline::ls (see sample.tclshrc).
bug fixes:
- lines added to tcl's history. (were only in readline's hist.)
- macro mappings didn't work. (only when hitting
mapped characters more than once.)
- various changes and fixes in configure.in
tclreadline-0.8: (May 1999)
- adapted for tcl8.1.
- minor bug fixes.
tclreadline-0.7: (Feb 1999)
first `public release'.