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In Mathematica, the documentation for ClearAll states:

ClearAll[symb1, symb2, ...]
clears values, definitions, attributes, messages, and defaults with symbols.

It also supports a similar format where it can clear any values / definitions which match an input string pattern:

ClearAll["form1", "form2", ...]

But there's also the function Remove, for which the documentation says:

Remove[symbol1, ...]
removes symbols completely, so that their names are no longer recognized by Mathematica.

It also supports the same pattern based string input that ClearAll supports.

To me, it seems like both functions accomplish the same exact thing. Is there any practical difference to using one or the other?

I know that if I give an attribute to a symbol, Clear won't remove it but ClearAll and Remove will. But it seems like Remove and ClearAll are doing the same thing.

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1 Answer 1

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ClearAll leaves the symbol in the symbol table:

In[1]:= x=7;

In[2]:= ?x
Global`x

x = 7

In[3]:= ClearAll[x]

In[4]:= ?x
Global`x

Remove removes it from the symbol table:

In[5]:= Remove[x]

In[6]:= ?x

Information::notfound: Symbol x not found.

One reason to use Remove instead of ClearAll is if a symbol hides another symbol further down your $ContextPath. Here's a contrived example:

In[1]:= $ContextPath = { "Global`", "System`" };

In[2]:= Global`Sin[x_] := "hello" 

Sin::shdw: Symbol Sin appears in multiple contexts {Global`, System`}
    ; definitions in context Global`
     may shadow or be shadowed by other definitions.

In[3]:= Sin[1.0]

Out[3]= hello

In[4]:= ClearAll[Sin]

In[5]:= Sin[1.0]

Out[5]= Sin[1.]

In[6]:= Remove[Sin]

In[7]:= Sin[1.0]

Out[7]= 0.841471

Another reason to use Remove is that the notebook interface only includes known symbols when you choose Edit > Complete Selection (or on a Mac, press Command-K).

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    Interesting. Is there any realistic cases where you might actually have to remove something from the symbol table? Dec 14, 2011 at 21:54
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    A common case occurs if one forgets to load a package before using a contained function -- for example evaluating JavaClassPath[] prior to calling Needs["JLink`"]. If the requisite Needs is called afterwards, you end up with JLink`JavaClassPath shadowing Global`JavaClassPath, with the front-end showing both symbols in red. Remove[Global`JavaClassPath] fixes the situation.
    – WReach
    Dec 14, 2011 at 22:20
  • @WReach: That actually explains and solves a problem I've been wondering about for ages. Dec 14, 2011 at 22:56
  • @robmayoff You could note that for non-mac computers use the command shortcut CTRL+k, and doing so is much faster than using the menu ;).
    – nixeagle
    Dec 14, 2011 at 23:30
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    @Szabolcs Actually Removed is not a normal head, but rather a print form. And once we Remove the y, we invalidate x in a subtle but permanent way - reintroducing the y into the session won't help. Remove is really a rather special-purpose destructuve operation, aimed more at removing auto-generated symbols. In a system of inter-connected functions (possibly from different packages), for this reason Remove is safe only if nothing depends on the symbol being removed. Resolving shadowing is the only mainstream (frequent, non-advanced) application of Remove I am aware of. Dec 15, 2011 at 21:28

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