/usr/gnu/man/cat.n/exit.n.Z(/usr/gnu/man/cat.n/exit.n.Z)
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NAME
exit - End the application
SYNOPSIS
exit ?returnCode?
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DESCRIPTION
Terminate the process, returning returnCode to the system as the exit
status. If returnCode isn't specified then it defaults to 0.
EXAMPLE
Since non-zero exit codes are usually interpreted as error cases by the
calling process, the exit command is an important part of signalling
that something fatal has gone wrong. This code fragment is useful in
scripts to act as a general problem trap:
proc main {} {
# ... put the real main code in here ...
}
if {[catch {main} msg]} {
puts stderr "unexpected script error: $msg"
if {[info exist env(DEBUG)]} {
puts stderr "---- BEGIN TRACE ----"
puts stderr $errorInfo
puts stderr "---- END TRACE ----"
}
# Reserve code 1 for "expected" error exits...
exit 2
}
SEE ALSO
exec(n), tclvars(n)
KEYWORDS
exit, process
Tcl exit(n)
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