Pretty sure most of you already know this but for those who don’t: you have two clipboards in Linux. One is the traditional clipboard where you copy with control c and paste with control v. The other one is when you highlight text and use the mouse middle click to paste text.

More details here.

    • @[email protected]M
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      1 year ago

      Is this applicable for Wayland as well? That link makes several references to X and its ecosystem of tools.

      • Chewy
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        141 year ago

        If I understand it correctly, Wayland only specifies a single clipboard but no primary. But most (all?) wayland compositors implement an additional protocol that’s also supported by the toolkits (gtk, qt, …) and programs like wl-clipboard.

        So yes, wayland also has clipboard + primary. But no secondary, as far as I found. Though I never used secondary on X anyway.

  • @[email protected]
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    501 year ago

    Ironically neither GNU nor Linux has a clipboard (well GNU Emacs probably has like 37 of them for some reason). “Primary selection” (the other clipboard that people don’t tell you about) started off on X11, which of course had to implement by XFree86, which became Xorg, and then it copied (ha ha) by other non-X-related software like gpm and toolkits like GTK when using Wayland.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Emacs’s regular clipboard is the “kill ring” which also allows you to retrieve any previously cut/copied text. It also has “registers” where you can store and retrieve snippets of text, which can be considered clipboards when used for this purpose. Registers can be referenced by any character you can type on your keyboard, including control characters like ^D.

      This totals… a lot of clipboards.

    • pinchcramp
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      101 year ago

      How do middle-click-to-paste and middle-click-to-scroll conflict? In Firefox I can click-to-paste if the cursor is over an input field and click-to-scroll anywhere else. Never had any problem with this behavior.

      • JWBananas
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        71 year ago

        How do middle-click-to-paste and middle-click-to-scroll conflict?

        Some of us are clumsy.

        • pinchcramp
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          11 year ago

          That’s not something I thought about. Good thing that you can disable the feature then

  • @[email protected]
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    271 year ago

    Not going to lie, I hate the middle click clipboard and disable it ASAP. I really dislike the idea that it copies things without my explicit permission.

      • Turun
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        101 year ago

        Yes. You can test this by selecting something, closing that window and attempting to paste. It won’t work. Closing the window removes the information about what was highlighted, so there is nothing to paste. If it were to copy upon selection you’d still be able to paste.

    • @mvirts
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      101 year ago

      Lol I have gotten so used to it that I can barely use web terminals that don’t support it

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I actually like the feature but could you explain how you disabled it? I’ve tried to merge all three clipboards into one a few years ago and couldn’t make it work

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Whenever I use a touchpad without physical buttons, I usually disable the middle button entirely. It’s more of a hammer-to-mosquito solution than what you were asking, but it’s as easy as adding this command to the autostart file (on Xorg): xinput set-button-map "Name-of-your-Touchpad-goes-here" 1 0 3 4 5 6 7, where “Name-of-your-Touchpad-goes-here” can be found with xinput list --name-only.

  • Quazatron
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    171 year ago

    Neat, he?

    It’s a pain when you switch between Windows and Linux all the time and you can’t do the middle click in Windows.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      Tbf, lots of things in Windows are a pain when you’re used to Linux.

      Correction: Lots more things are a pain…

      • xigoi
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        121 year ago

        But on the other hand, many things that you take for granted on Windows are a pain on Linux. For example, if you want to see advertisements, you can’t just open the Start menu.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        41 year ago

        Just simply…At least in Cinnamon, I can mouse over the audio icon on the panel and roll the scroll wheel to change the volume. Last time I tried it on Windows, you had to click the icon first. While that alone doesn’t sound like much, the whole OS is like that, needing extra little interactions for basically everything. Now that I’m used to using Cinnamon, using Windows feels like walking in beach sand.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            21 year ago

            I’ll admit the “last time I tried it on Windows” has been at least two major versions ago. I’ve never owned a computer with Windows 10 and never used a computer with Windows 11.

      • @Eheran
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        11 year ago

        The same is true the other way around.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    Is it possible to have have a Windows 10-like clipboard in Mint? Where you can copy multiple stuff with ctrl+c and then press super+v to have a dropdown of things that you copied with a possiblity to pin some of them?

  • @merthyr1831
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    111 year ago

    Oh, that explains why my steamdeck layout randomly pastes text when I’m trying to use a mmb shortcut on my dang browser

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    And then there is the “clipboard” (copy paste function) in the nano text editor being a third

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I knew and use this, but I never thought to call it two clipboards :)

    Plus I’d never heard of shift-ins, I just used ctrl-shift-c/v in graphic terminals :P

  • @JubilantJaguar
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    61 year ago

    This user, at least, has not touched a mouse in a decade. Young people do not even know what a mouse is.

    • @pirat
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      1 year ago

      It’s like a rat but cute, right??

      btw do you know how to press Ctrl on my keyboard? I have already found the key of C, they’re all white and sound good, kind of like an organ, but I can’t see any Ctrl key. Also, do I need to press the entire key of C at once to copy? It’s gonna sound intense! But I haven’t learned using all 10 fingers yet for the keyboard. I only use two, so it will be hard to press them all at once while also pressing Ctrl once I find it! Is it one of those black keys? Actually I haven’t even heard about the key of V yet… So I can’t paste before I’ve learned a lot more! I’ve only learned A to D by now. And btw how do I compile in C#? Is keyboard really supposed to be so hard to use???

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    On my arch install with hyperland, clip boards have been by far the hardest thing to setup. I finally got a basic clipboard manger working using clipman and wofi. But tbh I don’t really understand how that’s working.

    My main issues though have been trying to copy from one with vim open to other terminal with vim. Copying from vim elsewhere using y(yank) works fine. Copying elsewhere into vim works great. But vim to vim will not work for me.

    Also trying to find a way to make copying text out of a terminal running tmux not so overly complex and tedious.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      For copying from Tmux, I recommend tmux-yank. There are also multiple plugins allowing you to copy predefined set of text types (IP adresses, URLs, etc…). I’m currently using tmux-thumbs. Note that you have to set custom command in tmux-thums to actually copy the text to xclip or whatever you are using. example in my dotfiles

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I have tmux-thumbs, but only been able to use it a few times. Apparently most of what I need to copy is not ip’s and URLs. But this tmux-yank looks like what I’m looking for. I’ll give it a try. Thanks.