1XCLIP(1x)                                                            XCLIP(1x)
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NAME

6       xclip - command line interface to X selections (clipboard)
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SYNOPSIS

9       xclip [OPTION] [FILE]...
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DESCRIPTION

12       Reads  from  standard in, or from one or more files, and makes the data
13       available as an X selection for pasting  into  X  applications.  Prints
14       current X selection to standard out.
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16       -i, -in
17              read  text  into  X  selection  from  standard  input  or  files
18              (default)
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20       -o, -out
21              prints the selection to standard out (generally for piping to  a
22              file or program)
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24       -f, -filter
25              when  xclip  is  invoked in the in mode with output level set to
26              silent (the defaults), the filter option  will  cause  xclip  to
27              print the text piped to standard in back to standard out unmodi‐
28              fied
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30       -l, -loops
31              number of X selection requests (pastes into X  applications)  to
32              wait  for  before  exiting,  with a value of 0 (default) causing
33              xclip to wait for an unlimited number of requests until  another
34              application  (possibly another invocation of xclip) takes owner‐
35              ship of the selection
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37       -d, -display
38              X display to use (e.g. "localhost:0"),  xclip  defaults  to  the
39              value in $DISPLAY if this option is omitted
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41       -h, -help
42              show quick summary of options
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44       -selection
45              specify  which  X selection to use, options are "primary" to use
46              XA_PRIMARY (default), "secondary"  for  XA_SECONDARY  or  "clip‐
47              board" for XA_CLIPBOARD
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49       -version
50              show version information
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52       -silent
53              forks into the background to wait for requests, no informational
54              output, errors only (default)
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56       -quiet show informational messages on the terminal and run in the fore‐
57              ground
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59       -verbose
60              provide a running commentary of what xclip is doing
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63       xclip  reads  text  from standard in or files and makes it available to
64       other X applications for pasting as an X selection (traditionally  with
65       the  middle  mouse  button). It reads from all files specified, or from
66       standard in if no files are specified. xclip can also  print  the  con‐
67       tents of a selection to standard out with the -o option.
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69       xclip  was  designed to allow tighter integration of X applications and
70       command line programs. The default action is to silently  wait  in  the
71       background  for  X selection requests (pastes) until another X applica‐
72       tion places data in the clipboard, at which point xclip exits silently.
73       You  can  use  the  -verbose  option  to see if and when xclip actually
74       receives selection requests from other X applications.
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76       Options can be abbreviated as long  as  they  remain  unambiguous.  For
77       example,  it  is  possible to use -d or -disp instead of -display. How‐
78       ever, -v couldn't be used because it is ambiguous (it  could  be  short
79       for -verbose or -version), so it would be interpreted as a filename.
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81       Note  that only the first character of the selection specified with the
82       -selection option is important. This means that "p", "sec"  and  "clip"
83       would  have  the  same effect as using "primary", "secondary" or "clip‐
84       board" respectively.
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EXAMPLES

88       I hate man pages without examples!
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90       uptime | xclip
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92       Put your uptime in the X selection. Then middle click in an X  applica‐
93       tion to paste.
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95       xclip -loops 10 -verbose /etc/motd
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97       Exit  after  /etc/motd  (message  of the day) has been pasted 10 times.
98       Show how many selection requests (pastes) have been processed.
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100       xclip -o > helloworld.c
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102       Put the contents of the selection into a file.
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ENVIRONMENT

106       DISPLAY
107              X display to use if none is specified with the -display option.
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REPORTING BUGS

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

116       Kim Saunders <kims@debian.org> Peter Åstrand <astrand@lysator.liu.se>
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120                                                                     XCLIP(1x)
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