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registry

registry(n)                  Tcl Built-In Commands                 registry(n)



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NAME
       registry - Manipulate the Windows registry

SYNOPSIS
       package require registry 1.0

       registry option keyName ?arg arg ...?
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DESCRIPTION
       The  registry  package provides a general set of operations for manipu-
       lating the Windows registry.  The package implements the  registry  Tcl
       command.   This  command  is  only  supported  on the Windows platform.
       Warning: this command should be used with caution as a  corrupted  reg-
       istry can leave your system in an unusable state.

       KeyName  is  the  name of a registry key.  Registry keys must be one of
       the following forms:

              \\hostname\rootname\keypath

              rootname\keypath

              rootname

       Hostname specifies the name of any valid Windows host that exports  its
       registry.   The  rootname  component must be one of HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
       HKEY_USERS, HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, HKEY_CURRENT_USER,  HKEY_CURRENT_CONFIG, |
       HKEY_PERFORMANCE_DATA,  or  HKEY_DYN_DATA.   The  keypath can be one or |
       more registry key names separated by backslash (\) characters.

       Option indicates what to do with the registry  key  name.   Any  unique
       abbreviation for option is acceptable.  The valid options are:

       registry delete keyName ?valueName?
              If  the  optional  valueName  argument is present, the specified
              value under keyName will be deleted from the registry.   If  the
              optional valueName is omitted, the specified key and any subkeys
              or values beneath it in the registry hierarchy will be  deleted.
              If  the key could not be deleted then an error is generated.  If
              the key did not exist, the command has no effect.

       registry get keyName valueName
              Returns the data associated with the value valueName  under  the
              key  keyName.   If  either  the key or the value does not exist,
              then an error is generated.  For more details on the  format  of
              the returned data, see SUPPORTED TYPES, below.

       registry keys keyName ?pattern?
              If  pattern  isn't specified, returns a list of names of all the
              subkeys of keyName.  If pattern is specified, only  those  names
              matching pattern are returned.  Matching is determined using the
              same rules as for string match.  If the specified  keyName  does
              not exist, then an error is generated.

       registry set keyName ?valueName data ?type??
              If  valueName  isn't  specified,  creates  the key keyName if it
              doesn't already exist.  If valueName is specified,  creates  the
              key  keyName  and value valueName if necessary.  The contents of
              valueName are set to data with the type indicated by  type.   If
              type  isn't specified, the type sz is assumed.  For more details
              on the data and type arguments, see SUPPORTED TYPES below.

       registry type keyName valueName
              Returns the type of the value valueName in the key keyName.  For
              more  information  on  the  possible types, see SUPPORTED TYPES,
              below.

       registry values keyName ?pattern?
              If pattern isn't specified, returns a list of names of  all  the
              values  of  keyName.   If pattern is specified, only those names
              matching pattern are returned.  Matching is determined using the
              same rules as for string match.


SUPPORTED TYPES
       Each value under a key in the registry contains some data of a particu-
       lar type in a type-specific representation.  The registry command  con-
       verts  between this internal representation and one that can be manipu-
       lated by Tcl scripts.  In most cases, the data is simply returned as  a
       Tcl string.  The type indicates the intended use for the data, but does
       not actually change the representation.  For some types,  the  registry
       command  returns  the  data  in  a  different form to make it easier to
       manipulate.  The following types are recognized by  the  registry  com-
       mand:

       binary           The  registry  value  contains  arbitrary binary data.
                        The data is represented exactly in Tcl, including  any
                        embedded nulls.

       none             The registry value contains arbitrary binary data with
                        no defined type.  The data is represented  exactly  in
                        Tcl, including any embedded nulls.

       sz               The  registry value contains a null-terminated string.
                        The data is represented in Tcl as a string.

       expand_sz        The registry value contains a  null-terminated  string
                        that  contains  unexpanded  references  to environment
                        variables in the normal Windows  style  (for  example,
                        "%PATH%").   The  data  is  represented  in  Tcl  as a
                        string.

       dword            The registry value  contains  a  little-endian  32-bit
                        number.   The  data is represented in Tcl as a decimal
                        string.

       dword_big_endian The registry value contains a big-endian  32-bit  num-
                        ber.   The  data  is  represented  in Tcl as a decimal
                        string.

       link             The registry value contains a symbolic link.  The data
                        is  represented exactly in Tcl, including any embedded
                        nulls.

       multi_sz         The registry value contains an  array  of  null-termi-
                        nated  strings.   The  data is represented in Tcl as a
                        list of strings.

       resource_list    The registry value contains a  device-driver  resource
                        list.  The data is represented exactly in Tcl, includ-
                        ing any embedded nulls.

       In addition to the symbolically named types listed above, unknown types
       are identified using a 32-bit integer that corresponds to the type code
       returned by the system interfaces.  In this case, the  data  is  repre-
       sented exactly in Tcl, including any embedded nulls.


PORTABILITY ISSUES
       The registry command is only available on Windows.


KEYWORDS
       registry



Tcl                                   8.0                          registry(n)