The commands for adding and deleting list members are:
concat
?arg1 arg2 ... argn?
- Concatenates the
args
into a single list. It also eliminates leading and trailing spaces in the args and adds a single separator space between args. Theargs
toconcat
may be either individual elements, or lists. If anarg
is already a list, the contents of that list is concatenated with the otherargs
. lappend
listName
?arg1 arg2 ... argn?
- Appends the
args
to the listlistName
treating eacharg
as a list element. linsert
listName
index
arg1
?arg2 ... argn?
- Returns a new list with the new list elements inserted just before the
index
th element oflistName
. Each element argument will become a separate element of the new list. If index is less than or equal to zero, then the new elements are inserted at the beginning of the list. If index has the valueend
, or if it is greater than or equal to the number of elements in the list, then the new elements are appended to the list. lreplace
listName
first
last
?arg1 ... argn?
- Returns a new list with N elements of
listName
replaced by theargs
. Iffirst
is less than or equal to 0, lreplace starts replacing from the first element of the list. Iffirst
is greater than the end of the list, or the word end, then lreplace behaves like lappend. If there are fewerargs
than the number of positions betweenfirst
andlast
, then the positions for which there are noargs
are deleted. lset
varName
index
newValue
- The
lset
command can be used to set elements of a list directly, instead of usinglreplace
.
Lists in Tcl are the right data structure to use when you have an arbitrary number of things, and you'd like to access them according to their order in the list. In C, you would use an array. In Tcl, arrays are associated arrays - hash tables, as you'll see in the coming sections. If you want to have a collection of things, and refer to the Nth thing (give me the 10th element in this group of numbers), or go through them in order via
foreach
.
Take a look at the example code, and pay special attention to the way that sets of characters are grouped into single list elements.
Example
set b [list a b {c d e} {f {g h}}]puts "Treated as a list: $b\n"h}}"] puts "Transformed by split: $b\set b [split "a b {c d e} {f {g n" set a [concat a b {c d e} {f {g h}}] puts "Concated: $a\n"a single element puts "After lappending: $a\n" set b [linsert $a 3 "1 2 3"]lappend a {ij K lm} ;# Note: {ij K lm} is ;# "1 2 3" is a single element puts "After linsert at position 3: $b\n" set b [lreplace $b 3 5 "AA" "BB"]puts "After lreplacing 3 positions with 2 values at position 3: $b\n"
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