08-09-2012
In truth, it is a global variable accessed with the funny name of Egg::e. You can choose whether global things are allowed to use it by whether you make it public.
static functions in a class work the same way... In truth they are global functions accessed via classname::function().
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LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
global
global(n) Tcl Built-In Commands global(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
global - Access global variables
SYNOPSIS
global varname ?varname ...?
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
This command has no effect unless executed in the context of a proc body. If the global command is executed in the context of a proc body,
it creates local variables linked to the corresponding global variables (though these linked variables, like those created by upvar, are
not included in the list returned by info locals).
If varname contains namespace qualifiers, the local variable's name is the unqualified name of the global variable, as determined by the
namespace tail command.
varname is always treated as the name of a variable, not an array element. An error is returned if the name looks like an array element,
such as a(b).
EXAMPLES
This procedure sets the namespace variable ::a::x
proc reset {} {
global a::x
set x 0
}
This procedure accumulates the strings passed to it in a global buffer, separated by newlines. It is useful for situations when you want
to build a message piece-by-piece (as if with puts) but send that full message in a single piece (e.g. over a connection opened with socket
or as part of a counted HTTP response).
proc accum {string} {
global accumulator
append accumulator $string
}
SEE ALSO
namespace(n), upvar(n), variable(n)
KEYWORDS
global, namespace, procedure, variable
Tcl global(n)