TIP #210 Version 1.11: Add 'tempfile' Subcommand to 'file'

This is not necessarily the current version of this TIP.


TIP:210
Title:Add 'tempfile' Subcommand to 'file'
Version:$Revision: 1.11 $
Authors: Bob Techentin <techentin dot robert at mayo dot edu>
Donal K. Fellows <donal dot k dot fellows at manchester dot ac dot uk>
State:Final
Type:Project
Tcl-Version:8.6
Vote:Done
Created:Monday, 19 July 2004
Keywords:Tcl, filename

Abstract

Programmers often need to create temporary files. This TIP proposes adding the new subcommand tempfile to the file command, simplifying programmer effort in creating a unique temporary file name.

Rationale

Creating temporary files is a primitive and common enough operation that the ANSI C standard defines several subroutines to assist programmers. The tmpnam() function generates a string that is a valid file name that is not the name of an existing file. The tmpfile() function returns a valid file pointer to a temporary file that is removed automatically when it is closed or at program termination. Both functions are commonly used by programmers, without worrying about the optimal location for temporary files or schemes required to create unique file names.

Tcl has not supported temporary files, so programmers have had to write code to generate unique file names and choose locations like /tmp or C:\temp. The fileutil module of tcllib provides a relatively sophisticated implementation of tempfile, but extension writers have not been able to rely on this code. Modules in Iwidgets, the Tcl plugin, tcllib, and TclX all appear to have this sort of code, and not all are correct.

This TIP proposes to extend the file command with one subcommand to generate temporary files and file names. By extending the core command, application programmers and extension writers will be able to depend on this functionality for their code, without resorting to copyin