vote up 1 vote down star

I need to use the value of a variable inside another variable.

This is what I tried..

set cmd_ts "foo bar"
set confCmds {
    command1
    command2
    $cmd_ts
}
puts "confCmds = $confCmds"

But instead of getting

confCmds = 
    command1
    command2
    foo bar

I am getting:

confCmds =
    command1
    command2
    $cmd_ts

P.S. I tried the following to no avail

  1. $cmd_ts
  2. "$cmd_ts"
  3. {$cmd_ts}
  4. \$cmd_ts
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3 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

(almost) nothing will work as long as you use curly braces. The best suggestion is to use the list command:

set confCmds [list command1 command2 $cmd_ts]

I say (almost) because you can use subst to do variable substitution on confCmds, but that's not really what you want and that is fraught with peril. What you want is a list of words, one or more of which may be defined by a variable. That is precisely what the above solution gives you.

If you want, you can spread the commands on more than one line by using the backslash:

set confCmds [list \
    command1 \
    command2 \
    $cmd_ts \
]

This solution assumes that what you want is a tcl list. This may or may not be what you want, it all depends on how you treat this data downstream.

In a comment you wrote that what you really want is a string of newline-separated items, in which case you can just use double quotes, for example:

set confCmds "
    command1
    command2
    $cmd_ts
"

That will give you a string with multiple lines separated by newlines. Be careful of trying to treat this as a list of commands (ie: don't do 'foreach foo $confCmds') because it can fail depending on what is in $cmd_ts.

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Actually I want command1, command2 and $cmd_ts to be separated by a new line, but using list or concat I get them together as a space delimited string. Any idea how to achieve that as I am facing a rough time tackling \n :P – Aman Jain May 12 at 14:03
2  
You can use double quotes instead of curly braces in your original example. As long as you not later treating this data as a Tcl list you'll be fine. Another option is to convert the tcl list you just created into a string of newline separated items with [join $confCmds \n] – Bryan Oakley May 12 at 16:09
vote up 1 vote down

If you must have the list defined as you have it, you can also use the subst command, which will perform the substitution that the curly braces are preventing:

subst $confCmds
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vote up 1 vote down

Bryan's answer is good, apart from a typo I can't fix with my rep. (the list in the first command should be ended with a square bracket).

If you want to do anything useful with the commands, you probably want them as a list, but if you just want them separated by a new line do this at the end:

set confCmds [join $confCmds "\n"]
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thanks for pointing out the typo. I've fixed it. – Bryan Oakley May 12 at 16:15

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