Edit: Everything seems too complicated, so I just went with this https://odysee.com/simplescreenrecorder-2023-09-03_11.02.17:a When you try to copy something, you copy something and then you paste it. This is fine, but I wish there was an app which would help me copy multiple items at different times and seamlessly help me paste it.

i.e., copy two things, press ctrl + v to paste the last thing you copied and press ctrl + shift + v to paste the last second thing you copied and so on.

I am pretty sure there are better ways to do this than what I am asking. So, I would be interested in those ways too.

you can’t only install kclipper that’s the app?

  • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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    1 year ago

    First I have this systemd user service at ~/.config/systemd/user/copyq.service:

    [Install]
    WantedBy=graphical-session.target
    
    [Service]
    ExecStart=/nix/store/9qni1by8lzjccm5pc4hqpm70f3wllfqg-CopyQ-unstable-2023-04-14/bin/copyq
    KillMode=process
    KillSignal=SIGINT
    Type=simple
    
    [Unit]
    After=graphical-session.target
    Description=CopyQ, a clipboard manager
    Documentation=man:copyq(5)
    Requires=graphical-session.target
    Wants=graphical-session.target
    

    Replace the /nix/store/9qni1by8lzjccm5pc4hqpm70f3wllfqg-CopyQ-unstable-2023-04-14/bin/copyq with /usr/bin/copyq or wherever your copyq is installed. Then you probably need to reload the systemd daemon or something, not sure (try systemctl --user daemon-reload and then systemctl --user enable copyq.service and then systemctl --user start copyq.service - you only need to do this once).

    This service needs to be running for CopyQ to work. Alternatively use any other way you’re familiar with to automatically start copyq server after you log in. Trust me, there’s nothing more frustrating then suddenly needing it and realizing you haven’t started the server so it doesn’t have the content you’re looking for.

    Afterwards you need to configure your desktop environment to assign a global shortcut for the command copyq menu. For example in Cinnamon it’s System Settings -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Add custom shortcut. Then you add the name (e.g. CopyQ), the command (copyq menu) and after pressing Add you assign the shortcut, for example Super+V. This step is different for every desktop environment, but googling “[your DE name] global shortcuts” should help.

    If by any chance you have NixOS and Cinnamon, you may configure it like this:

    { config, pkgs, ... }:
    {
      home-manager.users.your-username = { # installs copyq as a user package
        home.packages = with pkgs; [
          copyq
        ];
      };
      dconf.settings = { # this is for creating the global Super+V shortcut
        "org/cinnamon/desktop/keybindings" = {
          "custom-list" = ["__dummy__" "custom0"];
        };
        "org/cinnamon/desktop/keybindings/custom-keybindings/custom0" = {
          binding = ["v"];
          command = "copyq menu";
          name = "CopyQ";
        };
      };
      systemd.user.services.copyq = { # creates the systemd service
        Unit = {
          Description = "CopyQ, a clipboard manager";
          Documentation = [ "man:copyq(5)" ];
          Wants = [ "graphical-session.target" ];
          Requires = [ "graphical-session.target" ];
          After = [ "graphical-session.target" ];
        };
    
        Service = {
          Type = "simple";
          ExecStart = "${pkgs.copyq}/bin/copyq";
          KillMode = "process";
          KillSignal = "SIGINT";
        };
    
        Install = {
          WantedBy = [
            "graphical-session.target"
          ];
        };
      };
    }