Content-type: text/html Manpage of XCLIP

XCLIP

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NAME

xclip - command line interface to X selections (clipboard)  

SYNOPSIS

xclip [OPTION] [FILE]...  

DESCRIPTION

Reads from standard in, or from one or more files, and makes the data available as an X selection for pasting into X applications. Prints current X selection to standard out.
-i, -in
read text into X selection from standard input or files (default)
-o, -out
prints the selection to standard out (generally for piping to a file or program)
-f, -filter
when xclip is invoked in the in mode with output level set to silent (the defaults), the filter option will cause xclip to print the text piped to standard in back to standard out unmodified
-l, -loops
number of X selection requests (pastes into X applications) to wait for before exiting, with a value of 0 (default) causing xclip to wait for an unlimited number of requests until another application (possibly another invocation of xclip) takes ownership of the selection
-d, -display
X display to use (e.g. "localhost:0"), xclip defaults to the value in $DISPLAY if this option is omitted
-h, -help
show quick summary of options
-selection
specify which X selection to use, options are "primary" to use XA_PRIMARY (default), "secondary" for XA_SECONDARY or "clipboard" for XA_CLIPBOARD
-version
show version information
-silent
forks into the background to wait for requests, no informational output, errors only (default)
-quiet
show informational messages on the terminal and run in the foreground
-verbose
provide a running commentary of what xclip is doing

xclip reads text from standard in or files and makes it available to other X applications for pasting as an X selection (traditionally with the middle mouse button). It reads from all files specified, or from standard in if no files are specified. xclip can also print the contents of a selection to standard out with the -o option.

xclip was designed to allow tighter integration of X applications and command line programs. The default action is to silently wait in the background for X selection requests (pastes) until another X application places data in the clipboard, at which point xclip exits silently. You can use the -verbose option to see if and when xclip actually receives selection requests from other X applications.

Options can be abbreviated as long as they remain unambiguous. For example, it is possible to use -d or -disp instead of -display. However, -v couldn't be used because it is ambiguous (it could be short for -verbose or -version), so it would be interpreted as a filename.

Note that only the first character of the selection specified with the -selection option is important. This means that "p", "sec" and "clip" would have the same effect as using "primary", "secondary" or "clipboard" respectively.

 

EXAMPLES

I hate man pages without examples!

uptime | xclip

Put your uptime in the X selection. Then middle click in an X application to paste.

xclip -loops 10 -verbose /etc/motd

Exit after /etc/motd (message of the day) has been pasted 10 times. Show how many selection requests (pastes) have been processed.

xclip -o > helloworld.c

Put the contents of the selection into a file.

 

ENVIRONMENT

DISPLAY
X display to use if none is specified with the -display option.

 

REPORTING BUGS

Please report any bugs, problems, queries, experiences, etc. directly to the author.

 

AUTHORS

Kim Saunders <kims@debian.org> Peter Åstrand <astrand@lysator.liu.se>


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
EXAMPLES
ENVIRONMENT
REPORTING BUGS
AUTHORS

This document was created by man2html, using the manual pages.
Time: 09:22:42 GMT, April 25, 2008