Blt_TreeCreate - Create tree data object.
#include <bltTree.h>
int
Blt_TreeCreate(interp, name, tokenPtr)
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
- Interpreter to report results back to.
- const char *name (in)
- Name of the new tree. Can be qualified by a namespace.
- Blt_Tree *tokenPtr (out)
- If not NULL, points to location to store the client tree token.
This procedure creates a C-based tree data object and optionally returns a token
to it. The arguments are as follows:
- interp
- Interpreter to report results back to. If an error occurs, then
interp->result will contain an error message.
- name
- Name of the new tree object. You can think of name as the memory
address of the object. It's a unique name that identifies the tree object.
No tree object name can already exist. Name can be qualified
by a namespace such as fred::myTree. If no namespace qualifier is
used, the tree will be created in the current namespace, not the global
namespace. If a qualifier is present, the namespace must already
exist.
- tokenPtr
- Holds the returned token. TokenPtr points to a location where it is
stored. Tree tokens are used to work with the tree object. If NULL, no
token is allocated. You can later use Tcl_TreeGetToken to obtain a
token.
The new tree data object created will initially contain only a
root node. You can add new nodes with Blt_TreeCreateNode.
Optionally a token for the tree data object is returned. Tree data
objects can be shared. For example, the tree and hiertable
commands may be accessing the same tree data object. Each client grabs a
token that is associated with the tree. When all tokens are released (see
Blt_TreeReleaseToken) the tree data object is automatically
destroyed.
A standard Tcl result is returned. If TCL_ERROR is returned, then
interp->result will contain an error message. The following errors
may occur:
- There already exists a tree by the same name as name. You can use
Tcl_TreeExists to determine if a tree exists beforehand.
- The tree name is prefixed by a namespace that doesn't exist. If you
qualified the tree name with a namespace, the namespace must exist. Unlike
Tcl procs and variables, the namespace is not automatically created for
you.
- Memory can't be allocated for the tree or token.
The following example creates a new
Blt_Tree token;
if (Blt_TreeCreate(interp, "myTree", &token) != TCL_OK) {
return TCL_ERROR;
}
printf("tree is %s\n", Blt_TreeName(token));
Tcl_TreeGetToken, Tcl_TreeExists, Tcl_TreeReleaseToken