[CMcC]: thinking about gutting TclX and moving some more useful functionality into tcl core. To that end, here are some think-pages: * [tclx file commands for core] * [tclx signal commands for core] * [tclx system control commands for core] The most frequent request is to move the TclX signal handling commands into Tcl. TclX is a grab-bag of useful functionality, a proving ground for new/nice facilities. They should be handled independently, so I have three categories. Another suggestion that's been made in the past is to create an extension that provides Tcl bindings for the most useful Posix functions. [DKF]: Useful Posix stuff (to me) has been: all the [signal] stuff, [fork]/[execl], [id] and [times]. YMMV. :^) ---- [Andreas Otto]: (23 may 2004) I ported tclx to 8.4.6 the current state of tclx : * build on Mac OS X, Linux (Unix) and Windows (SFU) with '''all''' features * ''all'' test-cases are now tcltest 2.2 ready * the tclx shell ''tcl'' now uses the ''tclsh'' setup * the ''configure'' is now Windows (SFU) ready * the very limited win32 support is now fully gone -> use Windows (SFU) the future of tclx: * this release (8.4.6) is the last traditional tclx release * the next release will split the different features of tclx into sparat extensions under the roof of tclx * tclx will be the startingpoint for something like binary tcllib future tclx extensions: * POSIX (collection of all POSIX commands) * signal (signal handling) * ... [CMcC]: Oh! I've been charging along trying to gut tclx, and not aware of your work, Andreas. I'd like to see a lot more of tclx's functionality incorporated into core tcl, because a lot of it is very useful, and the hassle of making an extension is probably beyond a lot of newbie tclers. Is it better to 1. gut everything useful from tclx, move it into tcl core, and leave tclx a hollow/compatibility shell? 2. move useful stuff to tcl core, leave tclx a compatibility extension and a proving/testing ground for new and out-there features? (The two sub-goals are mutually exclusive, really, because you can't be both compatible and a place for new stuff) 3. leave tclx exactly as it is and not steal functionality? (I don't think this is really viable) 4. roll much of the tclx functionality into a loadable module which is part of tcl core? 5. some other alternative, suggest ... [CMcC]: My personal feeling is that something between 1. (gut tclx) and 4. (keep some integrity) is best, but I think some of the file commands, for example, should completely disappear into tcl's [file] command. That kind of leaves the signal, posix and miscellaneous facilities. Signal and posix could remain as distinct modules, but they ought to be tied more to the core IMHO. Which leaves us with miscellaneous category (help and such) which aren't core facilities, things like keyed lists which are superceded/obsoleted by new tcl developments (qv [dict]), and useful stuff like intersect3 which should be in [tcllib]. That's how I see it, anyway ... move useful stuff into core, leave tclx behind because it now has a long history and can't function as a new facilities proving ground because of the need to remain compatible. Then another such extension collection can be made, and the cycle continues. I hope this isn't perceived as cruel or uncaring, I just think TclX has succeeded beyond the point where it should be kept distinct from the core. Although creating a distinct binary tcllib umbrella and calling that TclX is a very appealing concept, it would necessarily have to carry along TclX's baggage, wouldn't it? I love the idea of a binary tcllib, but I think it has to be a clean break with TclX because otherwise we might perpetuate the disparate interfaces, the obsolete commands, and other stuff which TclX compatibility entails. I hope the idea of a binary tcllib succeeds so well that whole slabs of core tcl functionality could move into it. Personally, I don't love the idea of extensions containing generally useful, and sometimes essential functionality, because they are hard for newbies to get and load, and their lack impoverishes tcl relative to some other systems and languages. The best possible solution would be for a packaging system for tcl which made it trivially easy to acquire essential functionality. Tcl doesn't have it, Python does, PERL does, and that's (I think) why they are perceived more positively. We're not close to having a universally workable trivially easy distribution/packaging solution for tcl, ([StarKit] notwithstanding), so the only reasonable solution is for tcl core to cannibalise essential functionality. Moreover, if TclX, expect, et al are to provide essential functionality, I think they need to take over '''all''' of the functionality for Tcl - it makes no sense to me to have some essential (or at least wildly useful) file functionality in Tcl, and some in TclX, without a coherent interface. The extensions aren't modular, and to get the functionality people need, they have to cobble together ''disparate'' extensions, using incompatible build systems, with different degrees of interoperability (e.g. TclX hangs tclhttpd, apparently.) There's possibly a reasonable question of how much of the TclX functionality [TCT] want to own, given the added maintenance workload. It seems to me that tcl core has to either support concepts like [file] completely, or not at all. If tcl core can't/won't support [file] in all its possible expressive richness, then it should simply move all [file] functionality into a distinct module. The other consideration is that at least some of TclX is a thin wrapper around standard POSIX functions. Things like [critcl] are useful in that, as [userid] shows. This raises questions of packaging and building ... which are interesting challenges to the way we look at tcl. I didn't ''intend'' to turn this into a political rant, but ... stuff happens :)