#!/bin/sh # # This script starts xcircuit under the Tcl interpreter, # reading commands from a special .wishrc script which # launches xcircuit and retains the Tcl interactive interpreter. # loclibdir=${XCIRCUIT_LIB_DIR:=XCLIBDIR} export XCIRCUIT_LIB_DIR XCIRCUIT_WISH=WISH_EXE export XCIRCUIT_WISH # Hacks for Cygwin if [ ${TERM:=""} = "cygwin" ]; then export PATH=$PATH:TCLLIBDIR export DISPLAY=${DISPLAY:=":0"} fi TKCON=true for i in $@ ; do case $i in -noc*) TKCON=;; --help) echo "Standard usage:" echo " xcircuit [filename]" echo "Online documentation:" echo " http://opencircuitdesign.com/xcircuit" exit 0 ;; --version) echo "XCircuit version PROG_VERSION revision PROG_REVISION" exit 0 ;; esac done if [ $TKCON ]; then if [ ! -f ${loclibdir}/CONSOLE ]; then loclibdir=${loclibdir}/tcl fi exec ${loclibdir}/CONSOLE \ -eval "source ${loclibdir}/CONSOLE_SCRIPT" \ -slave "package require Tk; set argc $#; set argv [list $*]; \ source ${loclibdir}/WRAPPER_INIT" else # # Run the stand-in for wish (xcircexec), which acts exactly like "wish" # except that it replaces ~/.wishrc with xcircuit.tcl. This executable is # *only* needed when running without the console; the console itself is # capable of sourcing the startup script. # exec ${loclibdir}/xcircexec -- $@ fi