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my(n)                           TclOO Commands                           my(n)

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NAME

my - invoke any method of current object

SYNOPSIS

package require TclOO my methodName ?arg ...? ______________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

The my command is used to allow methods of objects to invoke any method of the object (or its class). In particular, the set of valid values for methodName is the set of all methods supported by an object and its superclasses, including those that are not exported. The object upon which the method is invoked is always the one that is the current context of the method (i.e. the object that is returned by self object) from which the my command is invoked. Each object has its own my command, contained in its unique namespace.

EXAMPLES

This example shows basic use of my to use the variables method of the oo::object class, which is not publically visible by default: oo::class create c { method count {} { my variable counter print [incr counter] } } c create o o count -> prints "1" o count -> prints "2" o count -> prints "3"

SEE ALSO

next(n), oo::object(n), self(n)

KEYWORDS

method, method visibility, object, private method, public method TclOO 0.1 my(n) my(n) TclOO Commands my(n) ______________________________________________________________________________

NAME

my - invoke any method of current object

SYNOPSIS

package require TclOO my methodName ?arg ...? ______________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

The my command is used to allow methods of objects to invoke any method of the object (or its class). In particular, the set of valid values for methodName is the set of all methods supported by an object and its superclasses, including those that are not exported. The object upon which the method is invoked is always the one that is the current context of the method (i.e. the object that is returned by self object) from which the my command is invoked. Each object has its own my command, contained in its instance namespace.

EXAMPLES

This example shows basic use of my to use the variables method of the oo::object class, which is not publicly visible by default: oo::class create c { method count {} { my variable counter puts [incr counter] } } c create o o count -> prints "1" o count -> prints "2" o count -> prints "3"

SEE ALSO

next(n), oo::object(n), self(n)

KEYWORDS

method, method visibility, object, private method, public method TclOO 0.1 my(n)

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