Book tcltk tools - Compare Prices and buy the Book
Browse main categories
How to Make Money Online ?!
Are you an interested in planning to start an online business or do you just want to start an online shop ? Peter Kent and Jill K Finlayson, in their top selling book “How to Make Money Online with eBay, Yahoo!, and Google” (ISBN: 978-0072262612), introduce you to a step-by-step plan to generate revenue online and maximize profits. It helps you reach targeted buyers using strategic search engine placements ....




Title: Tcl/Tk Tools
Author: Mark Harrison
ISBN: 1565922182
EAN: 9781565922181
Pap/Cdr. Edition
661 Pages
Publisher: O'Reilly
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 1997-09-01


shopcond.avail.pricedelivery coststotal
USED*£ 0.57starting at £2.40£ 2.97Buy now
Used Book Tcl/Tk Tools bei Amazon Buy nowUSED£ 4.61£ 2.75£ 7.36Buy now
Book Tcl/Tk Tools on Amazon UK Buy nowNEW£ 35.50free on orders over £ 19£ 35.50Buy now

The Tcl language and Tk toolkit, even alone, offer many benefits: They're easy to learn, capable of producing good interfaces quickly, great for prototyping applications, and they are infinitely customizable. But one of the greatest strengths of Tcl/Tk is the range of extensions written for it. Now you can read about the most popular and robust extensions, clearly documented in the classic O'Reilly style by the extension authors themselves, supported with a foreword by Tcl/Tk creator John Ousterhout.

With Tcl/Tk extensions, you can:

Write robust object-oriented programs ([incr Tcl] and [incr Tk])

Produce complex interfaces with one-line commands ([incr Widgets] and Tix)

Layout graphs and tables (BLT)

Display 3D graphics with rich textures (TSIPP)

Interact with Oracle and Sybase databases (Sybtcl and Oratcl)

Network over sockets and remote procedure calls (Tcl-DP)

Create collaborative multi-user environments (GroupKit)

Automate programs that call for human users (expect)

Use complex data structures and UNIX system calls (TclX)

Embed Tk calls in C programs (ET)

Display tree structures (Tree)

This book documents all these extensions -- in an eminently readable and usable form by the people who created them -- and contains information on configuration, debugging, and other important tasks.

This book comes with a CD-ROM that includes Tcl/Tk, the extensions, and other tools documented in the text both in source form and as binaries for Solaris and Linux.

The Tcl language and Tk toolkit, even alone, offer many benefits: They're easy to learn, capable of producing good interfaces quickly, great for prototyping applications, and they are infinitely customizable. But one of the greatest strengths of Tcl/Tk is the range of extensions written for it. Now you can read about the most popular and robust extensions, clearly documented in the classic O'Reilly style by the extension authors themselves, supported with a foreword by Tcl/Tk creator John Ousterhout.

With Tcl/Tk extensions, you can: Write robust object-oriented programs ([incr Tcl] and [incr Tk]) Produce complex interfaces with one-line commands ([incr Widgets] and Tix) Layout graphs and tables (BLT) Display 3D graphics with rich textures (TSIPP) Interact with Oracle and Sybase databases (Sybtcl and Oratcl) Network over sockets and remote procedure calls (Tcl-DP) Create collaborative multi-user environments (GroupKit) Automate programs that call for human users (expect) Use complex data structures and UNIX system calls (TclX) Embed Tk calls in C programs (ET) Display tree structures (Tree) Replay and prototype user interactions (TKReplay) This book documents all these extensions -- in an eminently readable and usable form by the people who created them -- and contains information on configuration, debugging, and other important tasks. This book comes with a CD-ROM that includes Tcl/Tk, the extensions, and other tools documented in the text both in source form and as binaries for Solaris and Linux.

One of the greatest strengths of Tcl/Tk is the range of extensions written for it. This book clearly documents the most popular and robust extensions -- by the people who created them -- and contains information on configuration, debugging, and other important tasks. The CD-ROM includes Tcl/Tk, the extensions, and other tools documented in the text both in source form and as binaries for Solaris and Linux.
Mark Harrison has been involved in computer networking since 1980, when he had a college job answering email for Radio Shack's computer service department. He has worked in several areas of computing, including multi-lingual human interfaces and compiler design, and now works in the telecommunications industry as a senior architect for Advanced Intelligent Network (AIN) products at DSC Communications Corporation. He lives in Richardson, Texas, with his wife and two children, both of whom have USENET accounts. His interests include juggling, playing classical music, and collecting rare books.

2003-04-23 Content is very out of date.

Nothing inherently worng with this book. It includes a decent
tutorial to [incr tcl]... although more examples would be nice.
However, the content was written in the Tcl7.* era, and is
sadly out of date with current practises. That's not to
say this book won't be useful to you; just know make sure you
also refer to latest documentation for the various extensions it
covers. For eaxmple much of the XTcl extension features are now
part of the Tcl core...

last viewed books

The Letter The Letter
Head First Servlets and JSP: Passing the Sun Certified Web Component Developer Exam (Brain-Friendly Guides) Head First Servlets and JSP: Passin...
A Killing Frost A Killing Frost
Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming Cool It: The Skeptical Environmenta...
Man Vs Beast (CHERUB) Man Vs Beast (CHERUB)
The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing