Purpose: to dicuss [TclX]'s special keyed list [http://www.neosoft.com/tclx/man/Keylist.3.html] functions. From the TclX man page, you can read: A keyed list is a [list] in which each element contains a key and value pair. These element pairs are stored as lists themselves, where the key is the first element of the list, and the value is the second. The key-value pairs are referred to as fields. This is an example of a keyed list: {{NAME {Frank Zappa}} {JOB {musician and composer}}} Fields may contain subfields; `.' is the separator character. Subfields are actually fields where the value is another keyed list. Thus the following list has the top level fields ID and NAME, and subfields NAME.FIRST and NAME.LAST: {ID 106} {NAME {{FIRST Frank} {LAST Zappa}}} There is no limit to the recursive depth of subfields, allowing one to build complex data structures. Keyed lists are constructed and accessed via a number of commands. All keyed list management commands take the name of the variable containing the keyed list as an argument (i.e. passed by reference), rather than passing the list directly. * keyldel listvar key Delete the field specified by key from the keyed list in the variable listvar. This removes both the key and the value from the keyed list. * keylget listvar ?key? ?retvar | {}? Return the value associated with key from the keyed list in the variable listvar. If retvar is not specified, then the value will be returned as the result of the command. In this case, if key is not found in the list, an error will result. If retvar is specified and key is in the list, then the value is returned in the variable retvar and the command returns 1 if the key was present within the list. If key isn't in the list, the command will return 0, and retvar will be left unchanged. If {} is specified for retvar, the value is not returned, allowing the Tcl programmer to determine if a key is present in a keyed list without setting a variable as a side-effect. If key is omitted, then a list of all the keys in the keyed list is returned. * keylkeys listvar ?key? Return the a list of the keys in the keyed list in the variable listvar. If keys is specified, then it is the name of a key field who's subfield keys are to be retrieve. * keylset listvar key value ?key2 value2 ...? Set the value associated with key, in the keyed list contained in the variable listvar, to value. If listvar does not exists, it is created. If key is not currently in the list, it will be added. If it already exists, value replaces the existing value. Multiple keywords and values may be specified, if desired. ---- Is there a way we can ignore dot as separator & treat a whole string together? ---- [DKF]: In new code, consider using [dict] instead. The format's different, but the capabilities are similar. ---- keylget returns only the value of the 1st element with matching key in the list evenif there are multiple same elements. e.g, in the list {{inventory {{member {{member-type "PC"}}} {member {{member-type "LAPTOP"}}}}} Here inventory.member.member-type will return only "PC". I have written a code to get all the elements. Where can I upload the code for comments? ---- [Category Data Structure]