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I'm working on a cross browser paste capture. I've got this working & tested in Chrome and Firefox (on a mac). It should work on Chrome and Firefox on a PC as well but I have not had a chance to test it yet. Hopefully I'm not reinventing the wheel, I've looked for a good bit for a jQuery plugin or any javascript really that implements document-wide pasting.

This is not yet working in Opera (version 11.52) (on a mac, haven't tested on a PC). My issue is that when the cmd key is pressed, when I press the v key I do not get a keydown event. I'm not sure how to fix the issue as I'm not very framilar with Opera.

Work-in-progress jsfiddle is here.

The javascript below will not work as is, please see the jsfiddle for a working script. To make the script below work you need this os detection plugin.

Question to answer - How do I make this work in Opera?

Comments to leave if you like - Does this work for you? (post browser, os versions in comment)

update - Based on the comment Baez left this is a Opera on mac only issue.

update2 - I've updated the jsfiddle, its simplified the code a bit but still can't get it to work in mac Opera.


javascript (jquery)

$(document).ready(function() {
    // Fake paste
    var doFakePaste = false;
    $(document).on('keyup', function(e) {
        $('#status').html('');
        if (($.client.os === "Mac" && e.which == 86 && e.metaKey) ||
            ($.client.os !== "Mac" && e.which == 86 && e.ctrlKey)) {
            doFakePaste = false;
            $('#paste').blur().remove();
        }
    }).on('keydown', function(e) {
        $('#status').html('which: ' + e.which);
        if (($.client.os === "Mac" && e.which == 86 && e.metaKey) ||
            ($.client.os !== "Mac" && e.which == 86 && e.ctrlKey)) {
            doFakePaste = true;
            // got a paste
            $('<div></div>').attr('contenteditable', '').attr('id', 'paste').appendTo('body').on('paste', function(e) {
                setTimeout(function() {
                    doFakePaste = false;
                    var html = $('#paste').html();
                    var text = $('#paste').text();
                    $('#resultA').text(html);
                    $('#resultB').text(text);
                    $('#paste').blur().remove();
                }, 1);
            }).focus();
        }
    });

    $('#data').html('os: ' + $.client.os + ' browser: ' + $.client.browser);
});

html - Again see the jsfiddle for a working copy

<p>Click in this window and do a paste (ctrl-v or cmd-v). The pasted text will show up in the boxes below. I hope... the left box will be the HTML and the right box will be the TEXT.</p>

<div id="status"></div>
<div id="data"></div>

<div id="resultA"></div>
<div id="resultB"></div>
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  • Works for me in Windows 7 - Opera 11.60 Dec 17, 2011 at 6:29

1 Answer 1

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Not full answer, but part of my experience:

  1. You can remove $.client.os and use e.which == 86 && (e.metaKey || e.ctrlKey)

  2. You binded event on document. Bind event on div[contenteditable="true"] - may be it helps

  3. Your code: attr('contenteditable', ''). contenteditable can be true, false and inherit ( = get value from parent )

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  • Can't we use just this and not browser detection. if (e.type =='keydown' && e.which == 86 && (e.metaKey || e.ctrlKey))
    – hkasera
    Sep 21, 2012 at 9:26

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