![]() ![]() ![]() But Linux, the BSDs and similar should work fine now, and the rest show support it eventually. While doing that, press the letter C once, and then let go of the Ctrl key. How do I paste without Ctrl V Press the Ctrl key and hold it down. How do you copy and paste commands Keyboard shortcuts Copy: Ctrl+C. Emacs on Windows hasn’t implemented all the necessary plumbing yet (but it seems like it shouldn’t take much), and it’s probably more work to be done on Macos. Copy in one of the two ways: Ctrl + Shift + C. (This doesn’t work on all systems yet - basically it works the ones that traditionally use X. ![]() So I’ve now added a general infrastructure to Emacs 29 to allow this: Modes that feel that they can do something useful with non-plain-text selections can register themselves as such (and say which types they can handle), and then there’s a new ‘M-x yank-media’ command the user can use. Adas HTML Pastebin A place to safely paste and share colourful HTML content copied from. Org mode could probably also do something with the data?Īnd so on. The HTML mode could allow pasting both HTML and images into the mode - it could use the HTML from the browser as is, and it could offer to save the image to a local file and then insert an pointing to it. Emacs isn’t really a tool for creating WYSIWYG documents, so the editing support for anything other than plain text (and code) is pretty basic.Īs I noted a few years back, Emacs has the primitives needed to interact with non-text clipboard types, so adding code to (say) allow choosing “Copy Image” in a browser and then pasting it into a buffer would be trivial.īut then what? Now you have an image in your buffer - but what do you do with it? For yanking media to be useful, the Emacs mode has to be able to do something meaningful with it.įor instance, a mail mode could put it into an attachment (or inline it) - so that’s meaningful. ![]()
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