history(1tcl)
history --
manipulate the history list
Synopsis
history [option] [arg arg ...]
Description
The history command performs one of several
operations related to recently-executed commands recorded
in a history list. Each of these recorded commands is
referred to as an ``event''. When specifying an event to
the history command, the following forms may be
used:
-
A number: if positive, it refers to the event with that
number (all events are numbered starting at 1). If the
number is negative, it selects an event relative to the
current event (-1 refers to the previous event, -2 to the
one before that, and so on).
-
A string: selects the most recent event that matches the
string. An event is considered to match the string either
if the string is the same as the first characters of the
event, or if the string matches the event in the sense of
the string match command.
The history command can take any of the following
forms:
history-
Same as history info, described below.
history add command [exec]-
Adds the command argument to the history list as
a new event. If exec is specified (or
abbreviated) then the command is also executed and its
result is returned. If exec isn't specified then
an empty string is returned as the result.
history change newValue [event]-
Replaces the value recorded for an event with
newValue. event specifies the event to
replace, and defaults to the current event (not event -1).
This command is intended for use in commands that implement
new forms of history substitution and wish to replace the
current event (which invokes the substitution) with the
command created through substitution. The return value is
an empty string.
history event [event]-
Returns the value of the event given by event.
event defaults to -1. This command causes
history revision to occur: see below for details.
history info [count]-
Returns a formatted string (intended for humans to read)
giving the event number and contents for each of the events
in the history list except the current event. If
count is specified then only the most recent
count events are returned.
history keep count-
This command may be used to change the size of the history
list to count events. Initially, 20 events are
retained in the history list. This command returns an
empty string.
history nextid-
Returns the number of the next event to be recorded in the
history list. It is useful for things like printing the
event number in command-line prompts.
history redo [event]-
Re-executes the command indicated by event and
return its result. event defaults to -1. This
command results in history revision: see below for
details.
history substitute old new [event]-
Retrieves the command given by event (-1 by
default), replaces any occurrences of old by
new in the command (only simple character
equality is supported; no wild cards), executes the
resulting command, and returns the result of that
execution. This command results in history revision: see
below for details.
history words selector [event]-
Retrieves from the command given by event (-1 by
default) the words given by selector, and return
those words in a string separated by spaces. The
selector argument has three forms: if it is a
single number then it selects the word given by that number
(0 for the command name, 1 for its first argument, and so
on). If it consists of two numbers separated by a dash,
then it selects all the arguments between those two.
Otherwise selector is treated as a pattern; all
words matching that pattern (in the sense of string
match) are returned. In the numeric forms $
may be used to select the last word of a command. For
example, suppose the most recent command in the history
list is
format {%s is %d years old} Alice [expr $ageInMonths/12]
Below are some history commands and the results they would produce:
history words $ [expr $ageInMonths/12]
history words 1-2 {%s is %d years old} Alice
history words *a*o* {%s is %d years old} [expr $ageInMonths/12]
history words results in history revision: see below for details.
History revision
The history options event, redo,
substitute, and words result in
``history revision''. When one of these options is invoked
then the current event is modified to eliminate the history
command and replace it with the result of the history
command. For example, suppose that the most recent command
in the history list is
set a [expr $b+2]
and suppose that the next command invoked is one of the
ones on the left side of the table below. The command
actually recorded in the history event will be the
corresponding one on the right side of the table.
history redo set a [expr $b+2]
history s a b set b [expr $b+2]
set c [history w 2] set c [expr $b+2]
History revision is needed because event specifiers like -1
are only valid at a particular time: once more events have
been added to the history list a different event specifier
would be needed. History revision occurs even when
history is invoked indirectly from the current
event (for example, a user types a command that invokes a
Tcl procedure that invokes history): the
top-level command whose execution eventually resulted in a
history command is replaced. If you wish to
invoke commands like history words without
history revision, you can use history event to
save the current history event and then use history
change to restore it later.
25 April 2004
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004