The for command is similar to the C for statement. It takes four arguments:
for initial test final body
The first argument is a command to initialize the loop. The second argument is a boolean expression that determines whether the loop body will execute. The third argument is a command to execute after the loop body:
for {set i 0} {$i < 10} {incr i 3} {
lappend aList $i
}
set aList
=> 0 3 6 9
|
You could use for to iterate over a list, but you should really use foreach instead. Code like the following is slow and cluttered:
for {set i 0} {$i < [llength $list]} {incr i} { set value [lindex $list $i] }
This is the same as:
foreach value $list { }
3.145.27.58