Hi everyone i have a question for all of you. It may be basic or it may be a good one. I recently aquired a copy of "SCO TCP/IP runtime System for SCO Unix" (thats what the disks say) and for the life of me i can not get it to load. i have tried opening the disk in linux and it can not determine... (0 Replies)
The retail system our company uses runs on Sco Openserver 5. I wish to install it at home so I can gain some experience with unix. Does anyone know (before I install it) is sco unix comes with a boot loader.
When I installed mandrake linux on the same machine as win xp the boot loader wouldn't... (3 Replies)
In sco unix sysyem, we can see the users by suing w. at the idel column we can know how long a user who login the system but do noting.
My question is how can I auto logout such users like above? (6 Replies)
Hello Moto
I hope someone can help
We's here at work, have a unix box with sco openserver 5 on it, so it has a nice gui interface.. and also a fair few windows computers..
a system admin guy b4 me, has set up a user called neil, which can, when u try to access the unix box using windows... (2 Replies)
Hi experts
i wants install oracle 10G on SCO UNIX 5.0.7..
Please provide the some link to download the oracle for SCO Unix or what version of Oracle to this SCO unix plateform.
Please help me out
Thanks in advance
Neha (0 Replies)
another unix printing issue.
our client based pc's used to print some form's to our hp printer. as of the moment they can not print.
i have checked & did the ff:
#lpstat -r (scheduler is running)
i dunno if i need to restart the whole unix box via shutdown or just checking at... (15 Replies)
Hi
I have some sco xenix object, bin and archive files that operate in sco unix 5.0.7.
I know that sco unix kernel can support sco xenix binary. I want to know how can I link xenix and unix archives together? (0 Replies)
Hello everyone and thanks for your help in advance. Iama Windows Server administrator/programmer that has inheirited a SCO Unix 5.07 server running legacy applications. My first thought was to install the Unix OS on a separate test environment. However, I am in need of the most basic information... (3 Replies)
UNIX sco release 5.05 system does not boot:cannot open device hd(40)/boot
stage 1 boot failure: error loading hd(40)/bootWhat to do? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Joaoalpande
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
code
code(n) [incr Tcl] code(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
code - capture the namespace context for a code fragment
SYNOPSIS
itcl::code ?-namespace name? command ?arg arg ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Creates a scoped value for the specified command and its associated arg arguments. A scoped value is a list with three elements: the
"@scope" keyword, a namespace context, and a value string. For example, the command
namespace foo {
code puts "Hello World!"
}
produces the scoped value:
@scope ::foo {puts {Hello World!}}
Note that the code command captures the current namespace context. If the -namespace flag is specified, then the current context is
ignored, and the name string is used as the namespace context.
Extensions like Tk execute ordinary code fragments in the global namespace. A scoped value captures a code fragment together with its
namespace context in a way that allows it to be executed properly later. It is needed, for example, to wrap up code fragments when a Tk
widget is used within a namespace:
namespace foo {
private proc report {mesg} {
puts "click: $mesg"
}
button .b1 -text "Push Me" -command [code report "Hello World!"]
pack .b1
}
The code fragment associated with button .b1 only makes sense in the context of namespace "foo". Furthermore, the "report" procedure is
private, and can only be accessed within that namespace. The code command wraps up the code fragment in a way that allows it to be exe-
cuted properly when the button is pressed.
Also, note that the code command preserves the integrity of arguments on the command line. This makes it a natural replacement for the
list command, which is often used to format Tcl code fragments. In other words, instead of using the list command like this:
after 1000 [list puts "Hello $name!"]
use the code command like this:
after 1000 [code puts "Hello $name!"]
This not only formats the command correctly, but also captures its namespace context.
Scoped commands can be invoked like ordinary code fragments, with or without the eval command. For example, the following statements work
properly:
set cmd {@scope ::foo .b1}
$cmd configure -background red
set opts {-bg blue -fg white}
eval $cmd configure $opts
Note that scoped commands by-pass the usual protection mechanisms; the command:
@scope ::foo {report {Hello World!}}
can be used to access the "foo::report" proc from any namespace context, even though it is private.
KEYWORDS
scope, callback, namespace, public, protected, private
itcl 3.0 code(n)