RCS: @(#) $Id: README,v 1.9 2007/08/30 17:24:13 andreas_kupries Exp $ Welcome to the Tcllib, the Tcl Standard Library. This package is intended to be a collection of Tcl packages that provide utility functions useful to a large collection of Tcl programmers. The home web site for this code is http://tcllib.sourceforge.net/ . At this web site, you will find mailing lists, web forums, databases for bug reports and feature requests, the CVS repository (browsable on the web, or read-only accessible via CVS ), and more. The structure of the tcllib source hierarchy is: tcllib +- modules +- +- +- ... The install hierarchy is: .../lib/tcllib +- +- +- ... There are some base requirements that a module must meet before it will be added to tcllib: * the module must be a proper Tcl package * the module must use a namespace for its commands and variables * the name of the package must be the same as the name of the namespace * the module must reside in a subdirectory of the modules directory in the source hierarchy, and that subdirectory must have the same name as the package and namespace * the module must be released under the BSD License, the terms of which can be found in the toplevel tcllib source directory in the file license.terms * the module should have both documentation ([*]) and a test suite (in the form of a group of *.test files in the module directory). [*] Possible forms: doctools, TMML/XML, nroff (man), or HTML. The first format is the most preferred as it can be processed with tools provided by tcllib itself (See module doctools). The first two are preferred in general as they are semantic markup and thus easier to convert into other formats. * the module must have either documentation or a test suite. It can not have neither. * the module should adhere to Tcl coding standards When adding a module to tcllib, be sure to add it to the files listed below. * installed_modules.tcl contains a table listing all modules to be installed, modules excluded, and names the actions to be taken during installation of each module. Add a line to this table naming your module and its actions. Three actions have to be specified, for the package itself, its documentation, and the examples demonstrating it. The _null action can be used everywhere and signals that there is nothing to do. Although it is possible to use it for the package action it does make no sense there, as that means that no package code is installed. Other package actions are _tcl, _tci, and _text. The first causes the installer to copy all .tcl files from the source directory for the module into the appropriate module directory. _tci does all that and also expects a tclIndex file to copy. _tex is like _tcl, however it also copies all .tex files found in the source directory for the module. There is currently only one true documentation action. This action is _doc. It converts all documentation in doctools format into the format chosen by the user for installation and copies the result into the appropriate directory. There is currently one true action for examples, _exa. It copies all files in the source directory for examples into the directory chosen by the user as destination for examples. Each module source directory should have no subdirectories (other than the CVS directory), and should contain the following files: * source code *.tcl * package index pkgIndex.tcl * tests *.test * documentation *.man, *.n, *.xml If you do not follow this directory structure, the tcllib Makefile will fail to locate the files from the new module.