Tcl_GetOpenFile — Return a FILE* for a channel registered in the given interpreter (Unix only)
#include <tcl.h>
int
Tcl_GetOpenFile(
interp, chanID, write, checkUsage, filePtr)
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
-
Tcl interpreter from which file handle is to be obtained.
- const char *chanID (in)
-
String identifying channel, such as stdin or file4.
- int write (in)
-
Non-zero means the file will be used for writing, zero means it will
be used for reading.
- int checkUsage (in)
-
If non-zero, then an error will be generated if the file was not opened
for the access indicated by write.
- void **filePtr (out)
-
Points to word in which to store pointer to FILE structure for
the file given by chanID.
Tcl_GetOpenFile takes as argument a file identifier of the form
returned by the
open command and
returns at
*filePtr a pointer to the FILE structure for
the file.
The
write argument indicates whether the FILE pointer will
be used for reading or writing.
In some cases, such as a channel that connects to a pipeline of
subprocesses, different FILE pointers will be returned for reading
and writing.
Tcl_GetOpenFile normally returns
TCL_OK.
If an error occurs in
Tcl_GetOpenFile (e.g.
chanID did not
make any sense or
checkUsage was set and the file was not opened
for the access specified by
write) then
TCL_ERROR is returned
and the interpreter's result will contain an error message.
In the current implementation
checkUsage is ignored and consistency
checks are always performed.
Note that this interface is only supported on the Unix platform.
channel,
file handle,
permissions,
pipeline,
read,
write
Copyright © 1996-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc.