C programs of a particular type are known as ''big wish'' programs. They have this name because of their similarity to the [wish] program that is part of Tk. Unless you are completely new to Tcl/Tk, you are familiar with the program [tclsh]. With [tclsh] you can interactively enter Tcl commands and see the results of their evaluation. Or you can name a script file for [tclsh] to evaluate. The Tcl interpreter within [tclsh] starts out with all the built-in commands provided by the Tcl package. The program [wish] is quite similar to [tclsh]. The primary difference is that the Tcl interpreter within [wish] starts out with all the commands provided by both the Tcl and Tk packages. The commands of two packages are combined in one interpreter right from the startup of the program. A ''big wish'' program is one like [wish] that combines Tcl and one or more packages in one program. Examples include: * ''expect'' - includes Tcl and [Expect] packages * ''expectTk'' - includes Tcl, Tk, and [Expect] packages * ''tcl'' - includes Tcl and [TclX] packages * ''itclsh'' - includes Tcl and [Itcl] packages ...and there are others. In the early days of Tcl, the construction of a ''big wish'' program was the only way to extend Tcl with commands provided by an [extension]. As of 2003, these ''big wish'' programs are falling out of favor. Replacing them is the practice of making each component package available as a [load]able extension, so that each package can be pulled into the [tclsh] program at runtime, as they are demanded by scripts evaluating [[package require]] commands. This is an example of the extending solution winning out in the [embedding vs. extending] contest.