\name{getAnywhere} \alias{getAnywhere} \alias{argsAnywhere} \alias{[.getAnywhere} \alias{print.getAnywhere} \title{Retrieve an R Object, Including from a Namespace} \description{ These functions locates all objects with name matching its argument, whether visible on the search path, registered as an S3 method or in a namespace but not exported. \code{getAnywhere()} returns the objects and \code{argsAnywhere()} returns the arguments of any objects that are functions. } \usage{ getAnywhere(x) argsAnywhere(x) } \arguments{ \item{x}{a character string or name.} } \details{ The function looks at all loaded namespaces, whether or not they are associated with a package on the search list. Where functions are found as an S3 method, an attempt is made to find which namespace registered them. This may not be correct, especially if a namespace is unloaded. } \value{ For \code{getAnywhere()} an object of class \code{"getAnywhere"}. This is a list with components \item{name}{the name searched for.} \item{objs}{a list of objects found} \item{where}{a character vector explaining where the object(s) were found} \item{visible}{logical: is the object visible} \item{dups}{logical: is the object identical to one earlier in the list.} Normally the structure will be hidden by the \code{print} method. There is a \code{[} method to extract one or more of the objects found. For \code{argsAnywhere()} one or more argument lists as returned by \code{\link{args}}. } \seealso{ \code{\link{get}}, \code{\link{getFromNamespace}}, \code{\link{args}} } \examples{ getAnywhere("format.dist") getAnywhere("simpleLoess") # not exported from stats argsAnywhere(format.dist) } \keyword{data}