a painless way to copy and paste












0















I installed Ubuntu 18.10 last week and find myself missing a paste tool on MacOS, Paste – Cloud clipboard



It is a cloud clipboard helper, make a crisp sound when perform copy and paste operations.



This is helpful especially works between emacs and the no-emacs text to ensure coping is successful.



Is there such a counterpart utilities on Ubuntu










share|improve this question



























    0















    I installed Ubuntu 18.10 last week and find myself missing a paste tool on MacOS, Paste – Cloud clipboard



    It is a cloud clipboard helper, make a crisp sound when perform copy and paste operations.



    This is helpful especially works between emacs and the no-emacs text to ensure coping is successful.



    Is there such a counterpart utilities on Ubuntu










    share|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0








      I installed Ubuntu 18.10 last week and find myself missing a paste tool on MacOS, Paste – Cloud clipboard



      It is a cloud clipboard helper, make a crisp sound when perform copy and paste operations.



      This is helpful especially works between emacs and the no-emacs text to ensure coping is successful.



      Is there such a counterpart utilities on Ubuntu










      share|improve this question














      I installed Ubuntu 18.10 last week and find myself missing a paste tool on MacOS, Paste – Cloud clipboard



      It is a cloud clipboard helper, make a crisp sound when perform copy and paste operations.



      This is helpful especially works between emacs and the no-emacs text to ensure coping is successful.



      Is there such a counterpart utilities on Ubuntu







      gui






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jan 13 at 6:18









      AliceAlice

      415110




      415110






















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          What you're looking for is called "clipboard manager". I've made one and there's also recommendations of other clipboard managers on the same linked post. However, most don't support pasting to the "cloud", and I wouldn't recommend doing that for security reasons.



          However, you can either manually email the things you want, connect via remote connection to another device, or use public services like paste.ubuntu.com. Note also there's command line utility called pastebinit to post to the pastebin service directly.



          Among other things, I would recommend reading Arch Wiki article on clipboard. Linux uses something known as X11 server, which in short is the graphical interface. There actually multiple selections ( or multiple clipboards, you could say ), and some of the clipboard managers can help you work much more easily with them.






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            What you're looking for is called "clipboard manager". I've made one and there's also recommendations of other clipboard managers on the same linked post. However, most don't support pasting to the "cloud", and I wouldn't recommend doing that for security reasons.



            However, you can either manually email the things you want, connect via remote connection to another device, or use public services like paste.ubuntu.com. Note also there's command line utility called pastebinit to post to the pastebin service directly.



            Among other things, I would recommend reading Arch Wiki article on clipboard. Linux uses something known as X11 server, which in short is the graphical interface. There actually multiple selections ( or multiple clipboards, you could say ), and some of the clipboard managers can help you work much more easily with them.






            share|improve this answer






























              1














              What you're looking for is called "clipboard manager". I've made one and there's also recommendations of other clipboard managers on the same linked post. However, most don't support pasting to the "cloud", and I wouldn't recommend doing that for security reasons.



              However, you can either manually email the things you want, connect via remote connection to another device, or use public services like paste.ubuntu.com. Note also there's command line utility called pastebinit to post to the pastebin service directly.



              Among other things, I would recommend reading Arch Wiki article on clipboard. Linux uses something known as X11 server, which in short is the graphical interface. There actually multiple selections ( or multiple clipboards, you could say ), and some of the clipboard managers can help you work much more easily with them.






              share|improve this answer




























                1












                1








                1







                What you're looking for is called "clipboard manager". I've made one and there's also recommendations of other clipboard managers on the same linked post. However, most don't support pasting to the "cloud", and I wouldn't recommend doing that for security reasons.



                However, you can either manually email the things you want, connect via remote connection to another device, or use public services like paste.ubuntu.com. Note also there's command line utility called pastebinit to post to the pastebin service directly.



                Among other things, I would recommend reading Arch Wiki article on clipboard. Linux uses something known as X11 server, which in short is the graphical interface. There actually multiple selections ( or multiple clipboards, you could say ), and some of the clipboard managers can help you work much more easily with them.






                share|improve this answer















                What you're looking for is called "clipboard manager". I've made one and there's also recommendations of other clipboard managers on the same linked post. However, most don't support pasting to the "cloud", and I wouldn't recommend doing that for security reasons.



                However, you can either manually email the things you want, connect via remote connection to another device, or use public services like paste.ubuntu.com. Note also there's command line utility called pastebinit to post to the pastebin service directly.



                Among other things, I would recommend reading Arch Wiki article on clipboard. Linux uses something known as X11 server, which in short is the graphical interface. There actually multiple selections ( or multiple clipboards, you could say ), and some of the clipboard managers can help you work much more easily with them.







                share|improve this answer














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                edited Jan 13 at 8:47









                karel

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                answered Jan 13 at 8:42









                Sergiy KolodyazhnyySergiy Kolodyazhnyy

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                72.7k9152316






























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