Anyway, it is my understanding that most use of Tcl falls into one of
two categories: either standalone Tcl - as in "I wrote a program in Tcl
to do X" or "Expect". Are there any other (well known) apps like Expect
that use Tcl as an embedded language?
--
Windows 95 n. (Win-doze): A 32 bit extension to a 16 bit user interface for
an 8 bit operating system based on a 4 bit architecture from a 2 bit company
that can't stand 1 bit of competition.
Modern day upgrade --> Windows XP Professional x64: Windows is now a 64 bit
tweak of a 32 bit extension to a 16 bit user interface for an 8 bit
operating system based on a 4 bit architecture from a 2 bit company that
can't stand 1 bit of competition.
The advantage of tcl here is
that it is quite enabling even if you have a "live" elsewhere.
And with tcl you are _not_ dragged by the ears
through version hell .. again and again.
uwe
I'm sure there are many. I'm most familiar with AOLserver.
Another large project I've used: BRLcad.
Oh, wait. Define well known!
Eggdrop
And totally obscure, the project I work on IRM
My totally obscure project too: http://code.google.com/p/deskml/
The Totalview debugger has Tcl embedded as a command language:
http://www.totalviewtech.com/products/totalview.html
Micropolis (A.K.A. "S*mC*ty")
bitkeeper (distributed configuration management)
Many Cisco routers embed tcl
Fossil (configuration management)
Cadence (EDA)
FlightAware (Airline Flight Tracking)
Tom K.
On Nov 19, 7:00 am, gaze...@shell.xmission.com (Kenny McCormack)
wrote: