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See Also edit
Continued Lines edit
AM I had a problem with files that contain "continued lines". Here is a sketch:line with info \ continued on the next line (see the backslash) \ and the info is: Aha=BBBB another line with info - here the info is: Aha=CCI needed to extract information from the complete lines. Now usually I read files line by line and analyse the lines one by one. You can not do that with this type of layout. Or can you? Here is my little trick:
set contents [read $infile] set contents [string map [list "\\\n" " "] $contents] foreach line [split $contents \n] { .. process the line ... }This little fragment of code=:
- reads the complete file (in my case they were not very large)
- replaces the trailing backslash (and the newline) by a single space
- splits the contents into separate lines again
Trailing Newline edit
CLN: When you get the contents of a text widget, you get an extra trailing newline. If you read the contents of a file, insert it in the widget, and just save those contents, you'll add a blank line at the end of the file for each save. The solution is to save one less character than [$text get 1.0 end] returns, something like [puts $fid [string range [$text get 1.0 end] 0 end-1]].ECS: Why not this: [puts $fid [$text get 1.0 end-1c]]?CLN: Oops. I guess that'll work, too (though I haven't verified either).rdt: Well, isn't this because your puts is adding the newline? So wouldn't 'puts -nonewline $text' just do the job?CLN: No good deed goes unpunished! ;-) In my too-quick example, both get, from the text widget, and the puts added newlines. Try this:% text .t .t % pack .t % .t insert end "Foo" % string length [.t get 1.0 end] 4So, I guess to write out only what you see in the text widget, you'd have to do:
puts -nonewline [.t get 1.0 end-1c]RS: Note that text files not ending in a newline are considered ill-behaved, e.g. by diff...
Evaluate a Data Format edit
schlenk: If a data file or text is already quite similar to a Tcl program one can sometimes easily map it to a Tcl program and just execute it. One Example for this:A plotter data file like this:;PU 640, 6900 ;PD 640, 6909 , 640, 6913 , 640, 6917 , 640, 6921 , 640, 6924 ;PU 641, 6928 ;PD 641, 6932 , 642, 6936 , 643, 6940 , 644, 6944 , 645, 6947 , 646, 6951Looks already quite similar to a Tcl program, we just need to reformat it a little bit. This does the trick:
set data [string map {\n {} ; \n , {}} $data]Now we have to setup a nice evaluation environment, so we do not get surprised:
proc dummy_unknown {args} {return} proc PD args { foreach {x y} $args { puts "PenDown ( $x , $y )" } } proc PU args { foreach {x y} $args { puts "PenUp ( $x , $y )" } } set i [interp create -safe ] $i eval {namespace delete ::} interp alias $i unknown {} dummy_unknown interp alias $i PD {} PD interp alias $i PU {} PUAnd at last just evaluate our little program:
interp eval $i $data
Split Text into Lines edit
Splitting or processing a text file as a list of lines:set lines [split [read $fd] \n]so, the number of lines in the file is [llength $lines], the n'th line in the file is [lindex $lines $n] and so forth.