Note: This is an old page with lots of information on it.
The
Downloading Links are further down.
Release: 8.0.5,
Mar 9, 1999.
If you are using software that requires a particular
Tcl/Tk 8.0 release (e.g., 8.0.4 or 8.0p2) you can probably
do just fine with the 8.0.5 release.
If you need a particular release, please check out our
FTP site.
Related links:
When you download Tcl and Tk you get two programs, wish
and tclsh , supporting script libraries, and on-line reference
documentation. These programs are general purpose platforms for writing
applications with Tcl. Wish includes the graphical user
interface toolkit Tk. The packages are ready to use after installation.
Table of Contents
Platforms Supported
Downloading Binary Releases for Windows and Macintosh
Downloading Source Releases for UNIX, Windows and Macintosh
What's New in Tcl 8.0
What's New in Tk 8.0
Incompatibilities
Patches
License Terms
Tcl 8.0 and Tk 8.0 run on most releases of the following operating systems:
- Windows 95
- Windows NT
- Solaris and SunOS
- Linux
- HP-UX
- SGI IRIX
- Digital Unix
- AIX
- SCO Unix
- NetBSD, BSDi, FreeBSD
- Most other Unix-like operating systems
- Macintosh (68K and Power Mac)
Starting with Tcl/Tk 8.0.3, the Windows 3.1 platform is no longer supported.
If you wish to run Tcl and Tk under Windows 3.1, use version 7.6p2 or
version 8.0p2.
Tcl requires the Win32s subsystem on Windows 3.1.
If you keep your
Tcl1680.DLL
from the 8.0p2 distribution
you may still be able to use 8.0.3 or later on Windows 3.1,
but there is no guarantee that this will continue to work.
One cannot even compile this DLL with the current
Microsoft compilers.
Pre-compiled releases are available for the following Windows and Macintosh platforms.
Downloading Source Releases for Windows,
Macintosh, and UNIX
If you're running on a platform other than the ones listed above, or
if you want to make modifications to Tcl and Tk, you'll need to retrieve
the source releases. The files listed below correspond to the
latest stable release.
For access to the very latest source,
you can use our Net CVS Repository.
The stable source releases are available separately for Tcl and Tk
in several different forms:
UNIX Source Releases:
You'll want both Tcl and Tk sources. Choose between compressed tar and
gzipped tar format. The ZIP files listed under the Windows sources
contain the same information, too.
Compressed Tar Files
Gzip'ed Tar Files
Windows Source Releases:
Macintosh Source Releases:
Download one of the following files:
These files are in binhex format, which is understood by Fetch, StuffIt,
and many other Mac utilities. The unpacked file is a self-installing
executable: double-click on it and it will create a folder containing
sources files used to build Tcl and Tk.
Installation Notes
When you retrieve one of these files, you'll get a compressed tar
file with a name like tcl8.0.5.tar.gz or
tcl8.0.5.tar.Z .
The files are identical except for the technique used to compress
them (.gz files are generally smaller than .Z
files, but gunzip is not bundled with all UNIX versions).
To unpack the distribution, invoke shell commands like the
following, depending on which version of the release you retrieved:
gunzip -c tcl8.0.5.tar.gz | tar xf -
zcat tcl8.0.5.tar.Z | tar xf -
unzip tcl805.zip
Each of these commands will create a directory named tcl8.0.5 ,
which includes the sources for all platforms, documentation, and the
script library for Tcl 8.0.5.
To compile and install the distribution,
follow the instructions in the README file in the distribution
directory. Be sure to compile Tcl before Tk, since Tk depends on information
in Tcl.
Tcl and Tk should compile with little or no effort on any platform
that runs a UNIX-like operating system and the X Window System. This
includes workstations from Sun, HP, IBM, SGI, and DEC, PCs running
a number of Unix operating systems such as Solaris, Linux, SCO UNIX,
and FreeBSD, plus many other platforms such as Cray and NEC supercomputers.
These releases should also compile with little or no effort on Windows
and Macintosh platforms.
More Information
The most important changes in Tcl 8.0 are summarized below. See
the README and changes files in the distribution
for more complete information on what has changed, including both feature
changes and bug fixes.
- Bytecode compiler. The core of the Tcl interpreter
has been replaced with an on-the-fly compiler that translates Tcl scripts
to byte codes; a new interpreter then executes the byte codes. In earlier
versions of Tcl, strings were used as a universal representation; in
Tcl 8.0 strings are replaced with
Tcl_Obj structures ("objects")
that can hold both a string value and an internal form such as a binary
integer or compiled bytecodes. The new objects make it possible to
store information in efficient internal forms and avoid the constant
translations to and from strings that occurred with the old interpreter.
We have not yet converted all of Tcl to take full advantage of the
compiler and objects and have not converted any of Tk yet, but even
so you should see speedups of 2-3x on many programs and you may see
speedups as much as 10-20x in some cases (such as code that manipulates
long lists). Future releases should achieve even greater speedups.
The compiler introduces only a few minor changes at the level of Tcl
scripts, but it introduces many new C APIs for managing objects. See,
for example, the manual entries doc/*Obj*.3 .
- Namespaces. There is a new namespace mechanism
based on the implementation by Michael McLennan of Lucent
Technologies. This includes new
namespace and
variable commands. There are many new C APIs associated
with namespaces, but they will not be exported until Tcl 8.1.
- Binary I/O. The new object system in Tcl 8.0
supports binary strings (internally, strings are counted in addition to
being null terminated). There is a new
binary command for
inserting and extracting data to/from binary strings. Many commands,
such as puts , gets , and read , now
operate correctly on binary data. There is a new variable
tcl_platform(byteOrder) to identify the native byte order
for the current host.
- Random numbers. The
expr command
now contains a random number generator, which can be accessed via the
rand() and srand() math functions.
- Registry support. A new
registry
command is available under Windows to access the registry. It is
available as a package named registry .
- Safe-Tcl enhancements. There is a new hidden
command mechanism implemented with the Tcl commands
interp
hide , interp expose , interp invokehidden ,
and interp hidden and the C APIs Tcl_HideCommand
and Tcl_ExposeCommand . There is now support for safe
packages and extension loading, including new library procedures such as
safe::interpCreate (see the manual entry safe.n for
details).
- HTTP support. There are new library procedures for
doing GET, POST, and HEAD requests via the HTTP/1.0 protocol. See the
manual entry
http.n for details.
- There is a new command
file attributes for getting and
setting things like permissions and owner. There is also a new command
file nativename for getting back the platform-specific name
for a particular file.
- There is a new
fcopy command to copy data between
channels either in foreground or in the background using file events.
This replaces and improves upon the not-so-secret unsupported old
command unsupported0 .
- There are new library procedures for finding word breaks in strings.
See the manual entry
library.n for details.
- There are new C APIs
Tcl_Finalize (for cleaning up
before unloading the Tcl DLL) and Tcl_Ungets for pushing
bytes back into a channel's input buffer.
- Serial I/O devices. Tcl now supports serial I/O
devices on Windows and Unix, with a new
fconfigure -mode
option. The Windows driver does not yet support event-driven I/O on
serial devices.
- The
lsort command has new options -dictionary
and -index . The -index option allows for
very rapid sorting based on an element of a list.
- New notifier. The event notifier has been
completely rewritten (again). It should now allow Tcl to use an external
event loop like Motif's when it is embedded in other applications. No
script-level interfaces have changed, but many of the C APIs have.
The most important changes in Tk 8.0 are summarized below. See the
README and changes files in the distribution
for more complete information on what has changed, including both feature
changes and bug fixes.
- Native look and feel. The widgets have been rewritten
to provide (nearly?) native look and feel on the Macintosh and PC.
Many widgets, including scrollbars, menus, and the button family, are
implemented with native platform widgets. Others, such as entries and
texts, have been modified to emulate native look and feel. These changes
are backwards compatible except that (a) some configuration options
are now ignored on some platforms and (b) you must use the new menu
mechanism described below to get native look and feel for menus.
- New menus. There is a new interface for creating
menus, where a menubar is implemented as a menu widget instead of a
frame containing menubuttons. The
-menu option for a toplevel
is used to specify the name of the menubar; the menu will be displayed
outside the toplevel using different mechanisms on each platform
(e.g. on the Macintosh the menu will appear at the top of the screen).
See the menu demos in the widget demo for examples. The old style of
menus still works, but does not provide native look and feel. Menus
have several new features:
- New
-columnbreak and -hidemargin options
make it possible to create multi-column menus.
- It is now possible to manipulate the Apple and Help menus on the
Macintosh, and the system menu on Windows. It is also possible to have
a right justified Help menu on Unix.
- Menus now issue the virtual event
<<MenuSelect>>
whenever the current item changes. Applications can use this to
generate help messages.
- There is a new
-direction option for menubuttons, which
controls where the menu pops up relative to the button.
- New font mechanism. Tk's font support has been
completely reworked:
- Font names need not be nasty X LFDs: more intuitive names like
{Times 12 Bold} can also be used. See the manual entry
font.n for details.
- Font requests always succeed now. If the requested font is not
available, Tk finds the closest available font and uses that one.
- Tk
now supports named fonts whose precise attributes can be changed dynamically.
If a named font is changed, any widget using that font updates itself
to reflect the change.
- There is a new command
font for creating named fonts
and querying various information about fonts. If a named font is
changed, any widget using that font updates itself to reflect the
change.
- There are now officially supported C APIs for measuring and displaying
text. If you use these APIs now, your code will automatically handle
international text when internationalization is added to Tk in a future
release. See the manual entries
MeasureChar.3 , TextLayout.3 ,
and FontId.3 .
- The old C procedures
Tk_GetFontStruct , Tk_NameOfFontStruct ,
and Tk_FreeFontStruct have been replaced with more portable
procedures Tk_GetFont , Tk_NameOfFont , and
Tk_FreeFont .
- Application embedding. It is now possible to embed
one Tcl/Tk application inside another, using the
-container option
on frame widgets and the -use option for toplevel widgets
or on the command line for wish . Embedding should be fully
functional under Unix, but the implementation is incomplete on the
Macintosh and PC.
- Tcl/Tk logos. The Tcl/Tk logo and the
"Tcl Powered" logo are now freely available. GIF images for them
are available in several sizes in the
images library
subdirectory. Use and enjoy!
- Tk now works correctly with Safe-Tcl: it can be loaded into safe
interpreters using
safe::loadTk .
- Text widgets now allow images to be embedded directly in the text
without using embedded windows. This is more efficient and provides
smoother scrolling.
- Buttons have a new
-default option for drawing default
rings in a platform-specific manner.
- There is a new
gray75 bitmap, and the
gray25 bitmap is now really 25% on (due to an ancient
mistake, it had been only 12% on). The Macintosh now supports native
bitmaps, including new builtin bitmaps stop ,
caution , and note , plus the ability to use
bitmaps in the application's resource fork.
- The
destroy command now ignores windows that don't exist instead
of generating an error.
As suggested by the change in major release number, these releases
introduce some incompatibilities that affect scripts written for previous
releases. The main source of incompatibilities is the new Tcl compiler.
There were several places where the old Tcl semantics introduced complexity
or inefficiency into the compiler, so we decided to try a few small changes
to the semantics of the language to eliminate the problems. The changes all
involve obscure cases that we hope won't affect many people. The
incompatibility issues raised by the compiler are described in detail in
a separate document.
There are also a few other minor incompatibilities in Tcl 8.0 and Tk
8.0:
- Variable and command names may not include the character sequence
:: anymore: this sequence is now used as a namespace separator.
- 2-digit years are now parsed differently by the
clock command
to handle year 2000 issues better (years 00-38 are treated as
2000-2038 instead of 1900-1938).
- The variable
tcl_precision is now shared between interpreters
and defaults to 12 digits instead of 6; safe interpreters cannot
modify tcl_precision . The new object system in Tcl 8.0 causes
floating-to-string conversions (and the associated rounding) to
occur much less often than in Tcl 7.6, which can sometimes cause
behavioral changes.
- The old Macintosh commands
cp , mkdir ,
mv , rm , and rmdir are no longer
supported; all of these features are now available on all platforms
via the file command.
- The C APIs associated with the notifier have changed substantially.
- The procedures
Tcl_CreateModalTimeout and
Tcl_DeleteModalTimeout have been removed.
-
Tcl_CreateFileHandler and
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler now take Unix fd's and are only
supported on the Unix platform.
- The C APIs for creating channel drivers have changed as part of the
new notifier implementation. The Tcl_File interfaces have been removed.
Tcl_GetChannelFile has been replaced with
Tcl_GetChannelHandle . Tcl_MakeFileChannel now
takes a platform-specific file handle.
- Font specifications such as
Times 12 now interpret the
size as points, whereas it used to be pixels (this was actually a bug,
since the behavior was documented as points). To get pixels now, use a
negative size such as Times -12 .
- The
-transient option for menus is no longer
supported. You can achieve the same effect with the -type
field.
- In the canvas
coords command, polygons now return only
the points that were explicitly specified when the polygon was created
(they used to return an extra point if the polygon wasn't originally
closed). Internally, polygons are still closed automatically for
purposes of display and hit detection; the extra point just isn't
returned by the coords command.
- The photo image mechanism now uses Tcl_Channels instead of FILEs,
in order to make it portable. FILEs are no longer used anywhere
in Tk.
- The C procedures
Tk_GetFontStruct ,
Tk_NameOfFontStruct , and Tk_FreeFontStruct are
no longer available. Use Tk_GetFont ,
Tk_NameOfFont , and Tk_FreeFont instead.
Patches are available to correct several problems discovered in the
original releases of Tcl 8.0 and Tk 8.0. As additional bugs are found,
more patches will be released. At present, the following patches are
available for Tcl 8.0 and Tk 8.0:
- Tcl/Tk 8.0.5, released on March 9, 1999. Click here for a description
of the bugs fixed by this patch .
Acknowledgements.
- Tcl/Tk 8.0.4, released on November 18, 1998. Click here for a description
of the bugs fixed by this patch .
- Tcl/Tk 8.0.3, released on September 3, 1998. Click here for a description
of the bugs fixed by this patch .
- Tcl/Tk 8.0p2, released on November 24, 1997. Click here for a description
of the bugs fixed by this patch .
- Tcl/Tk 8.0p1, released on November 7, 1997. Click here for a description
of the bugs fixed by this patch .
If you are downloading a release for the first time, be sure to get the
highest patch level that is available. If you currently have an older
patch level of Tcl 8.0 and Tk 8.0 installed, you may wish to upgrade
to the most recent patch release. Patch releases should not introduce
any compatibility problems, so it should always be safe to upgrade.
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