#include <tcl.h> void Tcl_CreateMathFunc(interp, name, numArgs, argTypes, proc, clientData) int Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo(interp, name, numArgsPtr, argTypesPtr, procPtr, clientDataPtr) Tcl_Obj * Tcl_ListMathFuncs(interp, pattern)
Tcl allows a number of mathematical functions to be used in expressions, such as sin, cos, and hypot. These functions are represented by commands in the namespace, tcl::mathfunc. The Tcl_CreateMathFunc function is an obsolete way for applications to add additional functions to those already provided by Tcl or to replace existing functions. It should not be used by new applications, which should create math functions using Tcl_CreateObjCommand to create a command in the tcl::mathfunc namespace.
In the Tcl_CreateMathFunc interface, Name is the name of the function as it will appear in expressions. If name does not already exist in the ::tcl::mathfunc namespace, then a new command is created in that namespace. If name does exist, then the existing function is replaced. NumArgs and argTypes describe the arguments to the function. Each entry in the argTypes array must be one of TCL_INT, TCL_DOUBLE, TCL_WIDE_INT, or TCL_EITHER to indicate whether the corresponding argument must be an integer, a double-precision floating value, a wide (64-bit) integer, or any, respectively.
Whenever the function is invoked in an expression Tcl will invoke proc. Proc should have arguments and result that match the type Tcl_MathProc:
typedef int Tcl_MathProc( ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Value *args, Tcl_Value *resultPtr);
When proc is invoked the clientData and interp arguments will be the same as those passed to Tcl_CreateMathFunc. Args will point to an array of numArgs Tcl_Value structures, which describe the actual arguments to the function:
typedef struct Tcl_Value { Tcl_ValueType type; long intValue; double doubleValue; Tcl_WideInt wideValue; } Tcl_Value;
The type field indicates the type of the argument and is one of TCL_INT, TCL_DOUBLE or TCL_WIDE_INT. It will match the argTypes value specified for the function unless the argTypes value was TCL_EITHER. Tcl converts the argument supplied in the expression to the type requested in argTypes, if that is necessary. Depending on the value of the type field, the intValue, doubleValue or wideValue field will contain the actual value of the argument.
Proc should compute its result and store it either as an integer in resultPtr->intValue or as a floating value in resultPtr->doubleValue. It should set also resultPtr->type to one of TCL_INT, TCL_DOUBLE or TCL_WIDE_INT to indicate which value was set. Under normal circumstances proc should return TCL_OK. If an error occurs while executing the function, proc should return TCL_ERROR and leave an error message in the interpreter's result.
Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo retrieves the values associated with function name that were passed to a preceding Tcl_CreateMathFunc call. Normally, the return code is TCL_OK but if the named function does not exist, TCL_ERROR is returned and an error message is placed in the interpreter's result.
If an error did not occur, the array reference placed in the variable pointed to by argTypesPtr is newly allocated, and should be released by passing it to Tcl_Free. Some functions (the standard set implemented in the core, and those defined by placing commands in the tcl::mathfunc namespace) do not have argument type information; attempting to retrieve values for them causes a NULL to be stored in the variable pointed to by procPtr and the variable pointed to by clientDataPtr will not be modified. The variable pointed to by numArgsPointer will contain -1, and no argument types will be stored in the variable pointed to by argTypesPointer.
Tcl_ListMathFuncs returns a Tcl object containing a list of all the math functions defined in the interpreter whose name matches pattern. The returned object has a reference count of zero.