[Richard Suchenwirth] 2002-07-17 - Since Tcl 8.4, [lindex] and the new [lset] command take multiple indices to retrieve or modify an element in a nested [list]. To complement these two new goodies, here's a recursive [lsearch] that returns an index list, of the first occurrence of the wanted item, as can be used by [lindex] or [lset], or -1 if the element was not found. Note that the search goes down as long as an element can be interpreted as a list of more than one element, so intended strings like "John F Kennedy" will also be searched, e.g. for F. Note also that the result often is a list, so comparisons should be limited to == -1 or != -1. proc lrsearch {list el {prefix {}} } { set pos [lsearch $list $el] if {$pos != -1} {return [concat $prefix $pos]} for {set i 0} {$i<[llength $list]} {incr i} { set ilist [lindex $list $i] if {[llength $ilist]>1} { set pos [lrsearch $ilist $el [concat $prefix $i]] if {$pos != -1} {return $pos} } } return -1 } ---- % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} a 0 % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} b 1 % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} c 2 0 % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} d 2 1 0 % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} e 2 1 1 % lrsearch {a b {c {d e}}} f -1 However, nested lists with just one element escape attention:^( % lrsearch {a {{b c}} d} b -1 % lrsearch {a {b c} d} b 1 0 ---- [Additional list functions] | [Arts and crafts of Tcl-Tk programming]