% File src/library/utils/man/apropos.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2009 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{apropos} \title{Find Objects by (Partial) Name} \usage{ apropos(what, where = FALSE, ignore.case = TRUE, mode = "any") find(what, mode = "any", numeric = FALSE, simple.words = TRUE) } \alias{apropos} \alias{find} \arguments{ \item{what}{character string with name of an object, or more generally a \link{regular expression} to match against.} \item{where, numeric}{a logical indicating whether positions in the search list should also be returned} \item{ignore.case}{logical indicating if the search should be case-insensitive, \code{TRUE} by default. Note that in \R versions prior to 2.5.0, the default was implicitly \code{ignore.case = FALSE}.} \item{mode}{character; if not \code{"any"}, only objects whose \code{\link{mode}} equals \code{mode} are searched.} \item{simple.words}{logical; if \code{TRUE}, the \code{what} argument is only searched as whole word.} } \description{ \code{apropos()} returns a character vector giving the names of all objects in the search list matching \code{what}. \code{find()} is a different user interface to the same task. } \details{ If \code{mode != "any"} only those objects which are of mode \code{mode} are considered. If \code{where} is \code{TRUE}, the positions in the search list are returned as the names attribute. \code{find} is a different user interface for the same task as \code{apropos}. However, by default (\code{simple.words == TRUE}), only full words are searched with \code{\link{grep}(fixed = TRUE)}. } \author{Kurt Hornik and Martin Maechler (May 1997).} \value{ For \code{apropos} character vector, sorted by name, possibly with names giving the (numerical) positions on the search path. For \code{find}, either a character vector of environment names, or for \code{numeric = TRUE}, a numerical vector of positions on the search path, with names giving the names of the corresponding environments. } \seealso{ \code{\link{glob2rx}} to convert wildcard patterns to regular expressions. \code{\link{objects}} for listing objects from one place, \code{\link{help.search}} for searching the help system, \code{\link{search}} for the search path. } \examples{ require(stats) %% some of these have enormous output that varies a lot by version \dontrun{apropos("lm")} apropos("GLM") # more than a dozen ## that may include internal objects starting '.__C__' if ## methods is attached apropos("GLM", ignore.case = FALSE) # not one apropos("lq") cor <- 1:pi find("cor") #> ".GlobalEnv" "package:stats" find("cor", numeric = TRUE) # numbers with these names find("cor", numeric = TRUE, mode = "function") # only the second one rm(cor) \dontrun{apropos(".", mode="list") # a long list} # need a DOUBLE backslash '\\\\' (in case you don't see it anymore) apropos("\\\\[") \donttest{# everything % not diff-able length(apropos(".")) # those starting with 'pr' apropos("^pr") # the 1-letter things apropos("^.$") # the 1-2-letter things apropos("^..?$") # the 2-to-4 letter things apropos("^.{2,4}$") # the 8-and-more letter things apropos("^.{8,}$") table(nchar(apropos("^.{8,}$"))) }} \keyword{data} \keyword{documentation} \keyword{environment}