The title pretty much sums it up, normally in an IDE like Eclipse or Intellij, you can highlight/right-click on a method and click on option like "Find Usages", but I don't see an equivalent option in Xcode.
2 Answers
EDIT: after reading your question again, I think you are looking for these answers: Find method references in Xcode
The answer by Francisco Garcia shows advanced search options that you can find by clicking the little magnifying glass in the search tab.
You can check for symbol references; this would list all the calls you have to a method.
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If you hold down option and click on something, you can see some helpful hints and a link to documentation.
If you click on something that you have defined, it is helpful enought to link you to the file you declared it in.
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Yup, looks like search for symbol references is what I was looking for, although it also returns the definitions as well as places where the function is used. In Xcode 4.5 you can do it by pressing CMD-SHIFT-F and the search drop down has an option to search for symbol references. Nov 1, 2012 at 17:09
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JoshRagem, why post a duplicate answer paraphrased from an identical question instead of simply voting to close this one as a dupe? @krishonadish, you may be interested in my answer posted in 2013 to the duplicate question, which is better than the one quoted here. May 10, 2014 at 10:16
I think you're looking for the Quick Help Inspector. Make sure you have the Utilities Panel open (the toolbar that shows up on the right side of the screen). Mouseover the tabs along the top of the panel, and one of them will say "Show Quick Help Inspector". Click on that one, then highlight the method you are interested in, and the panel will display some of the basic information you are looking for.
If that doesn't tell you what you are looking for, you can also search in the Apple docs for your method name, but sometimes that can be hard to understand if you're totally new to developing on a Mac.
I usually just do a Google search on the method name. That usually produces links to a bunch of other SO questions with a ton of explanations from other users in everyday terms that are much easier to understand for new users.