 
			| GNU/Linux | CentOS 2.1AS(Slurm) | |
|  | GetOpnFl(3) |  | 
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Tcl_GetOpenFile − Get a standard IO File * handle from a channel. (Unix only)
#include <tcl.h>
int 
Tcl_GetOpenFile(interp, string, write, checkUsage,
filePtr)
| Tcl_Interp *interp (in) | Tcl interpreter from which file handle is to be obtained. | ||
| char *string (in) | String identifying channel, such as stdin or file4. | ||
| int write (in) | Non-zero means the file will be used for writing, zero means it will be used for reading. | ||
| int checkUsage (in) | If non-zero, then an error will be generated if the file wasn’t opened for the access indicated by write. | ||
| ClientData *filePtr (out) | Points to word in which to store pointer to FILE structure for the file given by string. | 
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Tcl_GetOpenFile takes as argument a file identifier of the form returned by the open command and returns at *filePtr a pointer to the FILE structure for the file. The write argument indicates whether the FILE pointer will be used for reading or writing. In some cases, such as a channel that connects to a pipeline of subprocesses, different FILE pointers will be returned for reading and writing. Tcl_GetOpenFile normally returns TCL_OK. If an error occurs in Tcl_GetOpenFile (e.g. string didn’t make any sense or checkUsage was set and the file wasn’t opened for the access specified by write) then TCL_ERROR is returned and the interpreter’s result will contain an error message. In the current implementation checkUsage is ignored and consistency checks are always performed. │
Note that this interface is only supported on the Unix platform.
channel, file handle, permissions, pipeline, read, write
|  | GetOpnFl(3) |  |