% File src/library/base/man/ls.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2012 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{ls} \alias{ls} \alias{objects} \title{List Objects} \usage{ ls(name, pos = -1L, envir = as.environment(pos), all.names = FALSE, pattern) objects(name, pos= -1L, envir = as.environment(pos), all.names = FALSE, pattern) } \arguments{ \item{name}{which environment to use in listing the available objects. Defaults to the \emph{current} environment. Although called \code{name} for back compatibility, in fact this argument can specify the environment in any form; see the \sQuote{Details} section.} \item{pos}{an alternative argument to \code{name} for specifying the environment as a position in the search list. Mostly there for back compatibility.} \item{envir}{an alternative argument to \code{name} for specifying the environment. Mostly there for back compatibility.} \item{all.names}{a logical value. If \code{TRUE}, all object names are returned. If \code{FALSE}, names which begin with a \samp{.} are omitted.} \item{pattern}{an optional \link{regular expression}. Only names matching \code{pattern} are returned. \code{\link{glob2rx}} can be used to convert wildcard patterns to regular expressions.} } \description{ \code{ls} and \code{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, \code{ls} shows what data sets and functions a user has defined. When invoked with no argument inside a function, \code{ls} returns the names of the function's local variables: this is useful in conjunction with \code{browser}. } \details{ The \code{name} argument can specify the environment from which object names are taken in one of several forms: as an integer (the position in the \code{\link{search}} list); as the character string name of an element in the search list; or as an explicit \code{\link{environment}} (including using \code{\link{sys.frame}} to access the currently active function calls). By default, the environment of the call to \code{ls} or \code{objects} is used. The \code{pos} and \code{envir} arguments are an alternative way to specify an environment, but are primarily there for back compatibility. Note that the \emph{order} of the resulting strings is locale dependent, see \code{\link{Sys.getlocale}}. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ \code{\link{glob2rx}} for converting wildcard patterns to regular expressions. \code{\link{ls.str}} for a long listing based on \code{\link{str}}. \code{\link{apropos}} (or \code{\link{find}}) for finding objects in the whole search path; \code{\link{grep}} for more details on \sQuote{regular expressions}; \code{\link{class}}, \code{\link{methods}}, etc., for object-oriented programming. } \examples{ .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" } \keyword{environment}