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I have a workspace with lots of objects and I would like to remove all but one. Ideally I would like to avoid having to type rm(obj.1, obj.2... obj.n). Is it possible to indicate remove all objects but these ones?

14 Answers 14

504
Answer recommended by R Language Collective

Here is a simple construct that will do it, by using setdiff:

rm(list=setdiff(ls(), "x"))

And a full example. Run this at your own risk - it will remove all variables except x:

x <- 1
y <- 2
z <- 3
ls()
[1] "x" "y" "z"

rm(list=setdiff(ls(), "x"))

ls()
[1] "x"
2
  • 14
    The technique being used here is to use list= to rm, which allows a character vector to be passed to rm instead of a list of names.
    – Spacedman
    May 31, 2011 at 16:14
  • 5
    So if one wants to keep several files it would be rm(list=setdiff(ls(), c("x", "x2"))) Mar 10, 2023 at 10:28
75

Using the keep function from the gdata package is quite convenient.

> ls()
[1] "a" "b" "c"

library(gdata)
> keep(a) #shows you which variables will be removed
[1] "b" "c"
> keep(a, sure = TRUE) # setting sure to TRUE removes variables b and c
> ls()
[1] "a"
2
  • 1
    I find that using "keep" from gdata seems to make more sense and it's easier to remember that all the complexity of the comand in base R.
    – Darius
    Jan 18, 2020 at 21:02
  • Can we add this please as base r function?
    – luchonacho
    Dec 14, 2023 at 11:15
74

I think another option is to open workspace in RStudio and then change list to grid at the top right of the environment(image below). Then tick the objects you want to clear and finally click on clear.

enter image description here

1
  • 4
    Likewise, click the Name box, which selects all the files, and then deselect all the files you want to keep.
    – Stephen
    Dec 27, 2017 at 15:18
56

I just spent several hours hunting for the answer to a similar but slightly different question - I needed to be able to delete all objects in R (including functions) except a handful of vectors.

One way to do this:

rm(list=ls()[! ls() %in% c("a","c")])

Where the vectors that I want to keep are named 'a' and 'c'.

Hope this helps anyone searching for the same solution!

1
  • 16
    This should also work, rm(list=setdiff(ls(), c("a", "c"))), right? See @Andrie's answer. Apr 29, 2014 at 10:44
21

To keep all objects whose names match a pattern, you could use grep, like so:

to.remove <- ls()
to.remove <- c(to.remove[!grepl("^obj", to.remove)], "to.remove")
rm(list=to.remove)
2
  • Amazing! Do you know any way to make this answer a one-line code instead of three?
    – Luis
    Nov 29, 2021 at 13:06
  • 2
    @Luis rm(list=grep("^obj", ls(), value=T, invert=T)) Sep 5, 2022 at 15:21
21

Replace v with the name of the object you want to keep

rm(list=(ls()[ls()!="v"]))

hat-tip: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/Removing-objects-and-clearing-memory-tp3445763p3445865.html

19

To keep a list of objects, one can use:

rm(list=setdiff(ls(), c("df1", "df2")))
6

This takes advantage of ls()'s pattern option, in the case you have a lot of objects with the same pattern that you don't want to keep:

> foo1 <- "junk"; foo2 <- "rubbish"; foo3 <- "trash"; x <- "gold"  
> ls()
[1] "foo1" "foo2" "foo3" "x"   
> # Let's check first what we want to remove
> ls(pattern = "foo")
[1] "foo1" "foo2" "foo3"
> rm(list = ls(pattern = "foo"))
> ls()
[1] "x"
2
  • whoah, that seems dangerous! Is there a way to test the pattern matching a la "echo" in the shell?
    – DQdlM
    Dec 11, 2014 at 11:57
  • 1
    I guess the rm function should always be used with care (more so in the shell!). See my edit for an answer to your question. Dec 11, 2014 at 13:29
4
require(gdata)
keep(object_1,...,object_n,sure=TRUE)
ls()
1
3

From within a function, rm all objects in .GlobalEnv except the function

initialize <- function(country.name) {

  if (length(setdiff(ls(pos = .GlobalEnv), "initialize")) > 0) {
    rm(list=setdiff(ls(pos = .GlobalEnv), "initialize"), pos = .GlobalEnv)
  }

}
3

let's think in different way, what if we wanna remove a group? try this,

 rm(list=ls()[grep("xxx",ls())]) 

I personally don't like too many tables, variables on my screen, yet I can't avoid using them. So I name the temporary things starting with "xxx", so I can remove them after it is no longer used.

2

assuming you want to remove every object except df from environment:

rm(list = ls(pattern="[^df]"))
1
  • This is not correct. [^df] is the negation of a set of characters d and f. This will also remove fdd and fd and ddd for instance, and keep any object that has at least one instance of a character that is not d or f. Feb 23, 2023 at 23:55
2
# remove all objects but selected
rm(list = ls()[which("key_function" != ls())])
1

How about this?

# Removes all objects except the specified & the function itself.

rme <- function(except=NULL){
  except = ifelse(is.character(except), except, deparse(substitute(except)))
  rm(list=setdiff(ls(envir=.GlobalEnv), c(except,"rme")), envir=.GlobalEnv)
}

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