Developer's Daily Unix by Example
  main | java | perl | unix | dev directory | web log
 
 
Main
Unix
Man Pages
   

Tcl_SetRecursionLimit

NAME
SYNOPSIS
ARGUMENTS
DESCRIPTION
KEYWORDS

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME

Tcl_SetRecursionLimit ? set maximum allowable nesting depth in interpreter

SYNOPSIS

#include <tcl.h>

int
Tcl_SetRecursionLimit(interp, depth)

ARGUMENTS

Tcl_Interp *interp (in)

Interpreter whose recursion limit is to be set. Must be greater than zero.

int depth (in)

New limit for nested calls to Tcl_Eval for interp.

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

At any given time Tcl enforces a limit on the number of recursive calls that may be active for Tcl_Eval and related procedures such as Tcl_GlobalEval. Any call to Tcl_Eval that exceeds this depth is aborted with an error. By default the recursion limit is 1000.

Tcl_SetRecursionLimit may be used to change the maximum allowable nesting depth for an interpreter. The depth argument specifies a new limit for interp, and Tcl_SetRecursionLimit returns the old limit. To read out the old limit without modifying it, invoke Tcl_SetRecursionDepth with depth equal to 0.

The Tcl_SetRecursionLimit only sets the size of the Tcl call stack: it cannot by itself prevent stack overflows on the C stack being used by the application. If your machine has a limit on the size of the C stack, you may get stack overflows before reaching the limit set by Tcl_SetRecursionLimit. If this happens, see if there is a mechanism in your system for increasing the maximum size of the C stack.

KEYWORDS

nesting depth, recursion


copyright 1998-2007, devdaily.com, all rights reserved.
devdaily.com, an alvin j. alexander production.