ls {base} | R Documentation |
ls
and objects
return a vector of character strings
giving the names of the objects in the specified environment.
When invoked with no argument at the top level prompt,
ls
shows what data sets and functions a user has defined.
When invoked with no argument inside a function,
ls
returns the names of the functions local variables.
This is useful in conjunction with browser
.
ls(name, pos = -1, envir = as.environment(pos), all.names = FALSE, pattern) objects(name, pos= -1, envir = as.environment(pos), all.names = FALSE, pattern)
name |
which environment to use in listing the available objects.
Defaults to the current
environment. Although called |
pos |
an alternative argument to |
envir |
an alternative argument to |
all.names |
a logical value. If |
pattern |
an optional regular expression. Only names
matching |
The name
argument can specify the environment from which
object names are taken in one of several forms:
as an integer (the position in the search
list); as
the character string name of an element in the search list; or as an
explicit environment
(including using
sys.frame
to access the currently active function calls).
By default, the environment of the call to ls
or objects
is used. The pos
and envir
arguments are an alternative
way to specify an environment, but are primarily there for back
compatibility.
Note that the order of the resulting strings is locale
dependent, see Sys.getlocale
.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
glob2rx
for converting wildcard patterns to regular
expressions.
ls.str
for a long listing based on str
.
apropos
(or find
)
for finding objects in the whole search path;
grep
for more details on ‘regular expressions’;
class
, methods
, etc., for
object-oriented programming.
.Ob <- 1 ls(pattern = "O") ls(pattern= "O", all.names = TRUE) # also shows ".[foo]" # shows an empty list because inside myfunc no variables are defined myfunc <- function() {ls()} myfunc() # define a local variable inside myfunc myfunc <- function() {y <- 1; ls()} myfunc() # shows "y"