Reputation: 189
Ok guys I imagine this is easy but I can't seem to find how to copy a string. Simply COPY to the system like CTRL+C on a text.
Basically I want to copy a string so I can for example, lets say, paste(ctrl+v).
Sorry for such a trivial question, haha.
Upvotes: 3
Views: 4645
Reputation: 285027
For Windows, you use win32clipboard. You will need pywin32.
For GTK (at least on GNU/Linux), you can use pygtk.
EDIT: Since you mentioned (a bit late) you're using wxPython, they actually have a module for this too, wx.Clipboard.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 26582
For a multi-platform solution you will need to use a cross-platform framework like wxPython or PyQt - they both have support for reading and writing to the system clipboard in a platform independent way.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 114035
For Windows, you can do this and it's much easier than creating a new subprocess etc...
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 20203
This depends a lot on the OS. On Linux, due to X's bizarre selection model, the easiest way is to use popen('xsel -pi')
, and write the text to that pipe.
For example: (I think)
def select_xsel(text):
import subprocess
xsel_proc = subprocess.Popen(['xsel', '-pi'], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
xsel_proc.communicate(some_text)
As pointed out in the comments, on a Mac, you can use the /usr/bin/pbcopy
command, like this:
xsel_proc = subprocess.Popen(['pbcopy'], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
If you want to support different OSes, you could combine different solutions with os.name
to determine which method to use:
import os, subprocess
def select_text(text):
if os.name == "posix":
# try Mac first
try:
xsel_proc = subprocess.Popen(['pbcopy'], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
except:
# try Linux version
xsel_proc = subprocess.Popen(['xsel', '-pi'], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
elif os.name == "nt":
# Windows...
Upvotes: 2