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ops indicates which operations are of interest, and consists of one or more of the following letters:
When the trace triggers, three arguments are appended to
command so that the actual command is as follows:
command name1 name2 op
name1 and name2 give the name(s) for the variable being accessed: if the variable is a scalar then name1 gives the variable's name and name2 is an empty string; if the variable is an array element then name1 gives the name of the array and name2 gives the index into the array; if an entire array is being deleted and the trace was registered on the overall array, rather than a single element, then name1 gives the array name and name2 is an empty string. op indicates what operation is being performed on the variable, and is one of r, w, or u as defined above.
command executes in the same context as the code that invoked the traced operation: if the variable was accessed as part of a Tcl procedure, then command has access to the same local variables as code in the procedure. This context may be different than the context in which the trace was created. If command invokes a procedure (which it normally does) then the procedure uses upvar or uplevel if it wishes to access the traced variable. Note also that name1 may not necessarily be the same as the name used to set the trace on the variable; differences can occur if the access is made through a variable defined with the upvar command.
For read and write traces, command can modify the variable to affect the result of the traced operation. If command modifies the value of a variable during a read or write trace, then the new value is returned as the result of the traced operation. The return value from command is ignored except that if it returns an error of any sort then the traced operation also returns an error with the same error message returned by the trace command (this mechanism can be used to implement read-only variables, for example). For write traces, command is invoked after the variable's value has been changed; it can write a new value into the variable to override the original value specified in the write operation. To implement read-only variables, command restores the old value of the variable.
While command is executing during a read or write trace, traces on the variable are temporarily disabled. This means that reads and writes invoked by command occurs directly, without invoking command (or any other traces) again. However, if command unsets the variable then unset traces are invoked.
When an unset trace is invoked, the variable has already been deleted: it appears to be undefined with no traces. If an unset occurs because of a procedure return, then the trace is invoked in the variable context of the procedure being returned to: the stack frame of the returning procedure no longer exist. Traces are not disabled during unset traces, so if an unset trace command creates a new trace and accesses the variable, the trace is invoked. Any errors in unset traces are ignored.
If there are multiple traces on a variable they are invoked in order of creation, the most recent first. If one trace returns an error, then no further traces are invoked for the variable. If an array element has a trace set, and there is also a trace set on the array as a whole, the trace on the overall array is invoked before the one on the element.
Once created, the trace remains in effect either until the trace is removed with the trace vdelete command described below, until the variable is unset, or until the interpreter is deleted. Unsetting an element of array removes any traces on that element, but traces on the overall array are not removed.
This command returns an empty string.