# Tcl {#sec-language-tcl} ## User guide {#sec-language-tcl-user-guide} Tcl interpreters are available under the `tcl` and `tcl-X_Y` attributes, where `X_Y` is the Tcl version. Tcl libraries are available in the `tclPackages` attribute set. They are only guaranteed to work with the default Tcl version, but will probably also work with others thanks to the [stubs mechanism](https://wiki.tcl-lang.org/page/Stubs). ## Packaging guide {#sec-language-tcl-packaging} Tcl packages are typically built with `tclPackages.mkTclDerivation`. Tcl dependencies go in `buildInputs`/`nativeBuildInputs`/... like other packages. For more complex package definitions, such as packages with mixed languages, use `tcl.tclPackageHook`. Where possible, make sure to enable stubs for maximum compatibility, usually with the `--enable-stubs` configure flag. Here is a simple package example to be called with `tclPackages.callPackage`. ``` { lib, fetchzip, mkTclDerivation, openssl }: mkTclDerivation rec { pname = "tcltls"; version = "1.7.22"; src = fetchzip { url = "https://core.tcl-lang.org/tcltls/uv/tcltls-${version}.tar.gz"; hash = "sha256-TOouWcQc3MNyJtaAGUGbaQoaCWVe6g3BPERct/V65vk="; }; buildInputs = [ openssl ]; configureFlags = [ "--with-ssl-dir=${openssl.dev}" "--enable-stubs" ]; meta = { homepage = "https://core.tcl-lang.org/tcltls/index"; description = "OpenSSL / RSA-bsafe Tcl extension"; maintainers = [ lib.maintainers.agbrooks ]; license = lib.licenses.tcltk; platforms = lib.platforms.unix; }; } ``` All Tcl libraries are declared in `pkgs/top-level/tcl-packages.nix` and are defined in `pkgs/development/tcl-modules/`. If possible, prefer the by-name hierarchy in `pkgs/development/tcl-modules/by-name/`. Its use is documented in `pkgs/development/tcl-modules/by-name/README.md`. All Tcl applications reside elsewhere. In case a package is used as both a library and an application (for example `expect`), it should be defined in `tcl-packages.nix`, with an alias elsewhere.