Variable: tcl-type-alist
tcl-type-alist is a variable defined in tcl.el.gz.
Value
(("proc" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("method" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands) ("destructor" tcl-commands)
("constructor" tcl-commands) ("expr" tcl-expr) ("catch" tcl-commands)
("if" tcl-expr "then" tcl-commands)
("elseif" tcl-expr "then" tcl-commands)
("elseif" tcl-expr tcl-commands) ("if" tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("while" tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("for" tcl-commands tcl-expr tcl-commands tcl-commands)
("foreach" nil nil tcl-commands) ("for_file" nil nil tcl-commands)
("for_array_keys" nil nil tcl-commands)
("for_recursive_glob" nil nil nil tcl-commands)
("loop" nil tcl-expr tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("loop" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands))
Documentation
Alist that controls indentation.
(Actually, this really only controls what happens on continuation lines).
Each entry looks like (KEYWORD TYPE ...).
Each type entry describes a sexp after the keyword, and can be one of:
* nil, meaning that this sexp has no particular type.
* tcl-expr, meaning that this sexp is an arithmetic expression.
* tcl-commands, meaning that this sexp holds Tcl commands.
* a string, which must exactly match the string at the corresponding
position for a match to be made.
For example, the entry for the "loop" command is:
("loop" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands)
This means that the "loop" command has three arguments. The first argument is ignored (for indentation purposes). The second argument is a Tcl expression, and the last argument is Tcl commands.
Source Code
;; Defined in /usr/src/emacs/lisp/progmodes/tcl.el.gz
;; FIXME need some way to recognize variables because array refs look
;; like 2 sexps.
(defvar tcl-type-alist
'(("proc" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("method" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("destructor" tcl-commands)
("constructor" tcl-commands)
("expr" tcl-expr)
("catch" tcl-commands)
("if" tcl-expr "then" tcl-commands)
("elseif" tcl-expr "then" tcl-commands)
("elseif" tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("if" tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("while" tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("for" tcl-commands tcl-expr tcl-commands tcl-commands)
("foreach" nil nil tcl-commands)
("for_file" nil nil tcl-commands)
("for_array_keys" nil nil tcl-commands)
("for_recursive_glob" nil nil nil tcl-commands)
;; Loop handling is not perfect, because the third argument can be
;; either a command or an expr, and there is no real way to look
;; forward.
("loop" nil tcl-expr tcl-expr tcl-commands)
("loop" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands))
"Alist that controls indentation.
\(Actually, this really only controls what happens on continuation lines).
Each entry looks like `(KEYWORD TYPE ...)'.
Each type entry describes a sexp after the keyword, and can be one of:
* nil, meaning that this sexp has no particular type.
* tcl-expr, meaning that this sexp is an arithmetic expression.
* tcl-commands, meaning that this sexp holds Tcl commands.
* a string, which must exactly match the string at the corresponding
position for a match to be made.
For example, the entry for the \"loop\" command is:
(\"loop\" nil tcl-expr tcl-commands)
This means that the \"loop\" command has three arguments. The first
argument is ignored (for indentation purposes). The second argument
is a Tcl expression, and the last argument is Tcl commands.")