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Tcl
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ALSO CALLED: Tool Command Language
DEFINITION: Tool Command Language (Tcl) is an interpreted script language developed by Dr. John Ousterhout at the University of California, Berkeley, and now developed and maintained by Scriptics. Tcl is comparable to: - Netscape JavaScript
- Microsoft's Visual Basic
- The UNIX-derived Practical Extraction and Reporting Language
- IBM's
Definition continues below.
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| Recent Vendor Reports on Tcl |
| Your request for Tcl resources returned limited or no results. The request has been expanded to include Scripting Languages resources.
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Desktop Authority: Scripting without Really Scripting
sponsored by ScriptLogic Corporation
PRODUCT REVIEW: Posted: 13 Jul 2005 | Published: 01 Jun 2005
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Rewrite the Script
sponsored by ScriptLogic Corporation
PRODUCT REVIEW: Posted: 13 Jul 2005 | Published: 12 Jul 2005
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TCL DEFINITION (continued):
Restructured Extended ExecutorIn general, script languages are easier and faster to code in than the more structured, compiled languages such as C and C++. Script languages are sometimes considered good "glue" languages for tying several compiled programs together. Or, as stand-alone programs, they can allow you to create simple but powerful effects on their own. TclBlend is a version of Tcl that can access certain Java language facilities. Tcl has a companion program, Tool Kit (Tk), to help create a graphical user
Tcl definition sponsored by WhatIs.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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