Post AoSsWWvcsvumWoHKL2 by Lapizistik@social.tchncs.de
 (DIR) More posts by Lapizistik@social.tchncs.de
 (DIR) Post #AoQTJ1rcA0hsidgiNU by foone@digipres.club
       2024-11-26T06:18:15Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Is there any program that gives you a system-wide clipboard stack?like if you need to copy two things, A and B, you could press "copy", "push", "copy", then "paste", "pop", "paste"?
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQTdhR1JHAxRP6Zua by nickapos@twit.social
       2024-11-26T06:21:54Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone I have installed clipboard tools for all my systems. Linux and Mac. Windows support this natively but you need to enable it.
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQTivwmmT6HtkSWPI by foone@digipres.club
       2024-11-26T06:22:27Z
       
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       maybe make it a FIFO queue instead. might be easier to understand
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQTlsKUggCpXyx1d2 by foone@digipres.club
       2024-11-26T06:22:45Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @dylanchapell exactly!
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQToqv2O8lc2bSo8O by efi@chitter.xyz
       2024-11-26T06:23:59Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone definitely something like that, but I prefer clipman which just keeps a history of copied things
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQUOQOMUbOcC58rTM by shironeko@fedi.tesaguri.club
       2024-11-26T06:30:51.474519Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone apparently https://github.com/yoogottamk/clipstack
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQWpDBVu98AxY26ue by Pixtxa@chaos.social
       2024-11-26T06:57:39Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone On some systems (I think windows 10/11 and ubuntu 22 at least) you can use ctrl+c multiple times and then os+v to get a list to select which one of the copied things you want to paste. When editing texts, there's vim, wich has support of a kind of clipboard stack, but I don't know how it works.
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQa7IQvQeeMJRYa6y by quikkie@infosec.exchange
       2024-11-26T07:34:34Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone In windows I make extensive use of Clipboard History (search for it in settings). And Linux has two clipboards, ctrl-c/ctrl-v and mouse select/middle-mouse-click
       
 (DIR) Post #AoQdr3yPp2FOeKjijI by clayote@peoplemaking.games
       2024-11-26T08:16:25Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone Sure, xfce's clipmanDo you need Windows?
       
 (DIR) Post #AoS7TgusZatwGIoWC8 by Mattcraig@mastodon.social
       2024-11-27T01:22:57Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone For macOS LaunchBar is excellent in this regard. In addition to, you know, being a great launcher. https://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/features.html
       
 (DIR) Post #AoSsWWvcsvumWoHKL2 by Lapizistik@social.tchncs.de
       2024-11-27T10:10:08Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @foone As others mentioned there are lots of clipboard managers for the different OSes¹, but in general password managers will delete the whole clipboard stack as there is no standardized way to remove exactly the one password they added 45 seconds before.So depending on your OS and use case “clipboard manager” should be the way to go (as others already mentioned).__¹on unixoides even the clipboard and the mark text withleft mouse and paste with mittle button are different