Tcl suffers in this respect from the same problem that FORTH does - the language is so malleable that everyone does it their own way. For example, before tcl got it's own native OO system, there were LOTS of competing OO systems, some which were compiled extensions, others written in pure tcl. All had proponents, none were standard.
Within the tcl community, this problem is well known, it just seems no one has the time to take on the enormous, thankless, never-ending task of curating all the useful bits that have been dropped over time. A few wikignomes bravely try to improve things, but it is like moving a mountain of sand with a pair of tweezers. (or emptying a well with an eyedropper).
Within the tcl community, this problem is well known, it just seems no one has the time to take on the enormous, thankless, never-ending task of curating all the useful bits that have been dropped over time. A few wikignomes bravely try to improve things, but it is like moving a mountain of sand with a pair of tweezers. (or emptying a well with an eyedropper).