"Ales Ziberna" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Dear useRs!
> 
> I have the following problem. I would like to find objects in 
> my environment
> that have two strings in it. For example, I might want to 
> find objects that
> have in their names "MY" and "TARGET". I do not care about 
> the ordering of
> these two substrings in the name, neither what is in front, behind or
> between them, the only thing important is that both words are 
> present. I
> apologize if this is covered in help pages (then I did not 
> understand it by
> reading them several times) or it was answered previously 
> (then I did not
> find it).
> 
> Since "ls" with argument pattern essentially uses "grep" (if I am not
> mistaken), I have an example for "grep"
> 
> text<-c("somethigMYsomthing elseTARGET another thing","MY 
> somthing TARGET
> another thing","somethig somthing elseTARGETMY another
> thing","somethigMTARGETY another thing")
> 
> grep(pattern="MY&TARGET", x=text)
> #I would like to get 1 2 3  and not 4 or actually their names using
> text[grep(pattern="MY&TARGET", x=text)]
> #of course, the "pattern" in this case is wrong
> 
> I know I can do
> 
> text[grep(pattern="MY", x=text)][grep(pattern="TARGET",
> x=text[grep(pattern="MY",x=text)])] 
> 
> However I hope there exists a more elegant way.
> 
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
> 
> Best,
> Ales Ziberna

How about:

    text[grep("(MY|TARGET)", text)]

That works on my Redhat box, R version 2.2.0.

--Todd
-- 
Why does clip mean both cut apart and fasten together?

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