Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 5th Nov 2010 19:15 UTC, submitted by Debjit
Thread beginning with comment 448842
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
1. select some text in your web browser, hit CTRL+C 2. close the browser 3. open a text editor, hit CTRL+V 4. see what I mean?
This is purely a GNOME issue (in the default configuration), I believe.
KDE uses klipper by default. This is a better clipboard than Windows XP had (I can't speak for Windows 7).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klipper
Klipper has clipboard history, and it merges X selections and Ctrl-C selections if you want it to, or it can keep the two separate if you like.
"Keeping them separate" means you can do either of the folowing and they will not intefere with the other (i.e. you can have two different active clipboard selections at the same time, if the X clipboard and the Ctrl-C clipboard are kept separate):
X clipboard:
1. select some text in your web browser
2. with the browser still open, open a text editor, middle-click
Ctrl-C clipboard:
1. select some text in your web browser, hit CTRL+C
2. close the browser
3. open a text editor, hit CTRL+V
If you run klipper, which is part of KDE by default, then both copy-paste methods above are available at the same time, separate from each other. They can have different clipboard contents. If that is too confusing, then the two clipboards entry methods can be merged into the one combined clipboard, if you like.
For GNOME, one can choose to run Glipper instead, which offers similar functionality:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glipper
Glipper is typically not installed by default, but it is a simple matter to add it.
KDE users by default, and GNOME users who have installed glipper, do not have the "problem" quoted above. It isn't actually a problem at all.




Member since:
2010-09-06
1. select some text in your web browser, hit CTRL+C
2. close the browser
3. open a text editor, hit CTRL+V
4. see what I mean?