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Tcl 8.0.4 for Windows
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by Scott Stanton
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Scriptics Corporation
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scott.stanton@scriptics.com
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RCS: @(#) $Id: README,v 1.1.1.1 2002-01-16 10:25:38 markom Exp $
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1. Introduction
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---------------
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This is the directory where you configure and compile the Windows
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version of Tcl.  This directory also contains source files for Tcl
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that are specific to Microsoft Windows.  The rest of this file
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contains information specific to the Windows version of Tcl.
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2. Distribution notes
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---------------------
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Tcl 8.0 for Windows is distributed in binary form in addition to the
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common source release.  The binary distribution is a self-extracting
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archive with a built-in installation script.
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Look for the binary release in the same location as the source release
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(ftp.scriptics.com:/pub/tcl or any of the mirror sites).  For most users,
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the binary release will be much easier to install and use.  You only
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need the source release if you plan to modify the core of Tcl, or if
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you need to compile with a different compiler.  With the addition of
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the dynamic loading interface, it is no longer necessary to have the
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source distribution in order to build and use extensions.
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3. Compiling Tcl
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----------------
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In order to compile Tcl for Windows, you need the following items:
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        Tcl 8.0 Source Distribution (plus any patches)
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        Borland C++ 4.52 (both 16-bit and 32-bit compilers)
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          or
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        Visual C++ 2.x/4.x/5.x
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        Visual C++ 1.5 (to build tcl1680.dll for Win32s support of exec)
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In practice, the 8.0.4 release is built with Visual C++ 5.0
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In the "win" subdirectory of the source release, you will find two
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files called "makefile.bc" and "makefile.vc".  These are the makefiles
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for the Borland and Visual C++ compilers respectively.  You should
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copy the appropriate one to "makefile" and update the paths at the
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top of the file to reflect your system configuration.  Now you can use
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"make" (or "nmake" for VC++) to build the tcl libraries and the tclsh
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executable.
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In order to use the binaries generated by these makefiles, you will
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need to place the Tcl script library files someplace where Tcl can
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find them.  Tcl looks in one of three places for the library files:
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        1) The path specified in the environment variable "TCL_LIBRARY".
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        2) In the lib\tcl8.0 directory under the installation directory
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           as specified in the registry:
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                For Windows NT & 95:
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                    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Scriptics\Tcl\8.0
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                For Win32s:
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                    HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\SOFTWARE\Scriptics\Tcl\8.0\
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        3) Relative to the directory containing the current .exe.
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            Tcl will look for a directory "..\lib\tcl8.0" relative to the
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            directory containing the currently running .exe.
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Note that in order to run tclsh80.exe, you must ensure that tcl80.dll
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and tclpip80.dll (plus tcl1680.dll under Win32s) are on your path, in
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the system directory, or in the directory containing tclsh80.exe.
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4. Building Extensions
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----------------------
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With the Windows compilers you have to worry about how you export symbols
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from DLLs.  tcl.h defines a few macros to help solve this problem:
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EXTERN - all Tcl_ function prototypes use this macro, which implies
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        they are exported.  You'll see this used in tcl.h and tk.h.
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        You should use this in your exported procedures.
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        However, this is not the whole story.
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TCL_STORAGE_CLASS - this is really an import/export flag, depending on if you are
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        importing symbols from a DLL (i.e., a user of the DLL), or if
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        you are exporting symbols from the DLL (i.e., you are building it.)
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        The EXTERN macro includes TCL_STORAGE_CLASS.
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        TCL_STORAGE_CLASS is defined to be either DLLIMPORT or DLLEXPORT as
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        described below.
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STATIC_BUILD - define this if you are *not* building a DLL
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        (e.g., a main program)
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DLL_BUILD - define this if you *are* building a DLL
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DLLIMPORT - If STATIC_BUILD is defined, this becomes nothing.
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        (On UNIX, DLLIMPORT is defined to be empty)
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        Otherwise, this this expands to __declspec(dllimport)
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DLLEXPORT - If STATIC_BUILD is defined, this becomes nothing.
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        (On UNIX, DLLEXPORT is defined to be empty)
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        Otherwise, this this expands to __declspec(dllexport)
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EXPORT(type, func)
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        For the Borland compiler, you need to export functions differently.
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        The DLLEXPORT macro is empty, and instead you need to use
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        EXPORT because they had a different order.  Your declaration will
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        look like
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        EXTERN EXPORT(int, Foo_Init)(Tcl_Interp *interp);
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We have not defined EXPORT anywhere.  You can paste this into your C file:
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#ifndef STATIC_BUILD
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#if defined(_MSC_VER)
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#   define EXPORT(a,b) __declspec(dllexport) a b
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#   define DllEntryPoint DllMain
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#else
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#   if defined(__BORLANDC__)
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#       define EXPORT(a,b) a _export b
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#   else
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#       define EXPORT(a,b) a b
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#   endif
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#endif
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#endif
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How to use these:
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Assume your extension is named Foo.  In its Makefile, define
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BUILD_Foo so that you know you are building Foo and not using it.
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Then, in your main header file, foo.h, conditionally define
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EXPORT to be either DLLIMPORT or DLLEXPORT based on the
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presense of BUILD_Foo, like this:
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#ifndef _FOO
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#define _FOO
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#include "tcl.h"
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/* Additional includes go here */
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/*
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 * if the BUILD_foo macro is defined, the assumption is that we are
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 * building the dynamic library.
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 */
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#ifdef BUILD_Foo
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#  undef TCL_STORAGE_CLASS
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#  define TCL_STORAGE_CLASS DLLEXPORT
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#endif
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/*
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 * Function prototypes for this module.
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 */
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EXTERN int Foo_Init _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp));
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EXTERN int Foo_SafeInit _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp));
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/* Additional prototypes go here */
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/*
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 * end of foo.h
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 * reset TCL_STORAGE_CLASS to DLLIMPORT.
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 */
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# undef TCL_STORAGE_CLASS
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# define TCL_STORAGE_CLASS DLLIMPORT
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#endif /* _FOO */
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In your C file, put EXTERN before then functions you need to export.
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If you use Borland, you'll need to use the old EXPORT macro, too.
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5. Test suite
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-------------
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This distribution contains an extensive test suite for Tcl.  Some of
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the tests are timing dependent and will fail from time to time.  If a
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test is failing consistently, please send us a bug report with as much
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detail as you can manage.
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In order to run the test suite, you build the "test" target using the
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appropriate makefile for your compiler.
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6. Known Bugs
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-------------
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Here is the current list of known bugs/missing features for the
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Windows version of Tcl:
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- Blocking "after" commands (e.g. "after 3000") don't work on Win32s.
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- Clock command fails to handle daylight savings time boundaries for
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  things like "last week".
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- Background processes aren't properly detached on NT.
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- File events only work on sockets.
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- Pipes/files/console/serial ports don't support nonblocking I/O.
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- The library cannot be used by two processes at the same time under
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  Win32s.
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If you have comments or bug reports for the Windows version of Tcl,
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please direct them to:
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or post them to the comp.lang.tcl newsgroup.

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