![]() ![]() Way back when it was just someone's project on the AHK forums I contributed a couple of fixes to it, before it was so complex. The code is pure spaghetti and filled with goto statements and global variables and trying to understand it is a lost cause, but despite that it's almost bug-free and covers all of the corner cases, including copying from zip files, Microsoft Office documents, images, files, etc. While it is written in AutoHotkey and hasn't seen any updates in 8 years, it still works perfectly under Windows 11. And tapping Z strips the text formatting. Flycut (Mac App Store link) An open source and free fork of Jumpcut with a few added features. Click Run to clear and speed up your Mac. Usually, these are user cache files, system logs, etc. Click Review Details to check the junk CleanMyMac X detected. Install via: brew install -cask maccy Jumpcut Open source and free. To use this app to clean your Mac, including clearing caches and browser history, follow these steps: Download CleanMyMac X. It's so intuitive that it makes other clipboard managers feel clunky. Supports searching through your clipboard history. Tapping X switches actions (Paste, Cancel, Delete, Delete All), and releasing Ctrl commits the action. ![]() Pressing Ctrl+V while holding Ctrl down brings up a tooltip with the current item on the clipboard, and you can move backwards and forwards through the stack by tapping C and V (while still holding Ctrl). As for everything else besides the 3rd party clipboard manager stuff, I have no idea what you’re talking about. There’s also no history AFAIK, so if you can’t paste anything, there’s nothing on the clipboard. When you do this, a small window will pop up and show you what’s being stored and what type of content it is. macOS’ clipboard isn’t really viewable to the end user, in order to view it, you have to paste what you have. You can see what’s stored there by opening Finder and then choosing Edit > Show Clipboard. The main functions are all accessible with the regular Ctrl and ZXC keys, in the normal flow. The clipboard is the place where your Mac stores the item you most recently copied. Ditto is good but I am partial to the user interface of an AutoHotkey program called ClipJump. Though, there are times when users wish to access the clipboard history to recover the data they have previously copied on it. ![]()
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