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{alias:cmdtrace}
h2. Name
*cmdtrace* — Control tcl command tracing
h2. Syntax
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*cmdtrace on* \[_level_]
*cmdtrace off*
*cmdtrace maxblockcount* _count_
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h2. Description
The *cmdtrace* turns on or off tcl command tracing. Traced commands are visible in Geocaps command log window. Enabling command tracing will reduce Tcl performance somewhat, although built-in C++ algorithms are not affected. Don't trace more levels than you need if this is a concern.
You may wish to trace commands only at a given level. A level refers to the level of nested scope in which a command is executed. A toplevel command, executed outside any proc and namespaces, belong to level 1. Commands called from a level 1 command will have level 2, etc.
h2. Arguments
*on* _level_
{indent}Enables command tracing. The default level is 0, meaning all levels are traced. If you specify a level only commands lower or equal to that level will be traced.
{indent}
*off*
{indent}Disables command tracing.{indent}
*maxblockcount* _count_
{indent}How many lines to keep in the command log window. The default value is 2000.{indent}
h2. Examples
The following example show commands at level 1 and level 2.
h3. Commands at different levels
{noformat:|borderWidth=1|bgColor=#eeeeee}
namespace eval myspace {
variable x 1
}
proc myproc {} {
puts hello
}
puts "I'm a toplevel command"
myproc
{noformat}
Executing the previous example yields the following output in Geocaps command log. The left-most number indicates the level. Note that proc and namespace are commands like any other in Tcl.
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1:namespace eval myspace {
variable x 1
}
2:variable x 1
1:proc myproc {} {
puts hello
}
1:puts "I'm a toplevel command"
1:myproc
2:puts hello
{noformat}
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