Hi, people. After I revisited some older .RData files this evening, I came to consider that comment() might not be such a bad idea, after all! :-) However, if I randomly visit such older files, it is unlikely that I remember which objects got a comment attribute and which do not. It would be nice if ls.str() was automatically showing comments for the objects it lists (with maybe some parameter to turn this capability off). On the same vein, the more compact ls() output might use some device to at least inform the user that a comment is available. I have no satisfying suggestion to offer about what would be the best way for ls() to yield this information. (For example, suffixing listed names with an hash or asterisk would defeat functions using the produced list.) Maybe someone else might have a good, clever, usable idea? Fine enough, str() will show me the full comment. However, users having to explicitly call str on all objects, or make (easy) equivalent stunts, is not fully in the spirit of a comment, which is to volunteer itself... -- Fran?ois Pinard http://pinard.progiciels-bpi.ca