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What is the best way to copy text to the clipboard? (multi-browser)

I have tried:

function copyToClipboard(text)
{
    if (window.clipboardData) // IE
    {  
        window.clipboardData.setData("Text", text);
    }
    else
    {  
        unsafeWindow.netscape.security.PrivilegeManager.enablePrivilege("UniversalXPConnect");  
        const clipboardHelper = Components.classes["@mozilla.org/widget/clipboardhelper;1"].getService(Components.interfaces.nsIClipboardHelper);  
        clipboardHelper.copyString(text);
    }
}

but in Internet Explorer gives a syntax error. In Firefox it says "unsafeWindow is not defined".

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Just curious, what is it that you want to copy to the clipboard that the user can't do themselves? – scunliffe Dec 30 '08 at 16:52
18  
Nothing special. They can do it by themselves but I want to offer also the possibility of clicking a button without worrying about selecting the correct portion of text. – SCL Dec 31 '08 at 0:03
2  
possible duplicate of Put text on the clipboard with FireFox, Safari and Chrome – GvS Jul 16 '10 at 13:30
feedback

16 Answers

up vote 121 down vote accepted

Nice library that works in Flash 10:

http://code.google.com/p/zeroclipboard/

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2  
great, thank you. – Sepehr Lajevardi Feb 24 '10 at 8:14
280  
too bad it requires flash. – neoneye Jun 8 '10 at 10:52
1  
thank you for posting this – Alberto Zaccagni Aug 7 '10 at 20:15
4  
Works really nice, extremely compatible. (yeah a pity it's flash but watcha ya gonna do?) FYI, bit.ly is using it... – Trufa Jan 30 '11 at 7:11
34  
Is there any jQuery/JavaScript-only solution available? – conqenator Apr 4 '11 at 13:32
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feedback

Automatic copying to clipboard may be dangerous, therefore most browsers (except IE) make it very difficult. Personally, I use the following simple trick:


function copyToClipboard (text) {
  window.prompt ("Copy to clipboard: Ctrl+C, Enter", text);
}

The user is presented with the prompt box, where the text to be copied is already selected. Now it's enough to press Ctrl+C and Enter (to close the box) -- and voila!

Now the clipboard copy operation is SAFE, because the user does it manually (but in a pretty straightforward way). Of course, works in all browsers.

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Great trick - thanks for this. – monojohnny Jul 27 '11 at 10:54
1  
Awesome. Absolutely perfect for what I needed (and it doesn't use Flash)! Thanks! – Trevor Aug 4 '11 at 19:27
But there is a limit on the amount of characters displayed in that dialog, and thus there is a limit on the amount of data to be copied. – Denilson Sá Sep 4 '11 at 2:32
3  
Nice trick - but remember it is Cmd-C for Mac – Casebash Oct 5 '11 at 23:36
4  
Clever, but this only supports single line. – Aram Kocharyan Oct 23 '11 at 8:56
show 1 more comment
feedback

With the following workaround, it will work in both IE and FireFox:

First, download this swf file: http://www.logiclabz.com/postimg/clipboard.rar

Then, use the following function to add text to the client's Clipboard:

function copy_to_clipboard(text) {
    if (window.clipboardData) {
        window.clipboardData.setData('text', text);
    } else {
        var clipboarddiv = document.getElementById('divclipboardswf');
        if (!clipboarddiv) {
            clipboarddiv = document.createElement('div');
            clipboarddiv.setAttribute("name", "divclipboardswf");
            clipboarddiv.setAttribute("id", "divclipboardswf");
            document.body.appendChild(clipboarddiv);
        }
        clipboarddiv.innerHTML = '<embed src="clipboard.swf" FlashVars="clipboard=' + encodeURIComponent(text) + '" width="0" height="0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"></embed>';
    }
    alert('The text is copied to your clipboard...');
} 

Reference: http://www.logiclabz.com/javascript/copy-to-clipboard-with-javascript-on-mozilla-firefox-and-ie.aspx

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1  
I have tried and tried this code and similar code, and it just does not work. It doesn't work for me in FF3, and it doesn't work for me in Google Chrome 1.5. I sure wish it did, though. – Elmo Gallen Jan 14 '09 at 3:33
3  
I've heard this doesn't work in Flash 10. – Greg Dean Mar 5 '09 at 21:38
1  
This approach will fail until Flash 10. – Nicholas Kreidberg Apr 17 '09 at 22:03
3  
Yep, this no longer works in non-IE browsers if Flash 10 is installed :( – Alex Jan 19 '10 at 16:13
12  
BTW see code.google.com/p/zeroclipboard for a working multi-browser solution – Alex Jan 19 '10 at 16:35
show 3 more comments
feedback

If you want a really simple solution (takes less than 5 minutes to integrate) and looks good right out of the box then Clippy is a nice alternative to some of the more complex ones above.

http://github.com/mojombo/clippy

It's the same copy solution used but Github. Example Flash embed code below:

<object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000"
        width="110"
        height="14"
        id="clippy" >
<param name="movie" value="/flash/clippy.swf"/>
<param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" />
<param name="quality" value="high" />
<param name="scale" value="noscale" />
<param NAME="FlashVars" value="text=#{text}">
<param name="bgcolor" value="#{bgcolor}">
<embed src="/flash/clippy.swf"
       width="110"
       height="14"
       name="clippy"
       quality="high"
       allowScriptAccess="always"
       type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
       pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer"
       FlashVars="text=#{text}"
       bgcolor="#{bgcolor}"
/>
</object>
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1  
For anyone interested, check Clippy being used on GitHub when copying the URL for the repo. – Radek May 23 '11 at 11:19
Does Clippy work well with AJAX loaded content? Trying to make a link clippable, it's not in the page at first. zclip is not doing the job for me. – josemota Nov 21 '11 at 14:21
feedback

Reading and modifying the clipboard from a webpage raises security and privacy concerns. However in internet explorer it is possible to do it. I found this example snippet:

<script type=”text/javascript”>
function select_all(obj) {
  var text_val=eval(obj);
  text_val.focus();
  text_val.select();
  if (!document.all) return; // IE only
  r = text_val.createTextRange();
  r.execCommand(\\’copy\\’);
}</script>
<input value=”http://www.sajithmr.com”
 onclick=”select_all(this)” name=”url” type=”text” />
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2  
Using flash for a simple copy operation seems like overkill, glad there was a clean JS way to do this. And since we are in a corporate env. IE is just fine. Thanks Bandi! – Eddie Jan 26 '11 at 15:10
Im sorry to tell you that this is not a "COPY TO CLIPBOARD" this is just extracting some info from the dom and placing it in r... which you could do with innerHTML and the like anyway... – mrBorna Aug 30 '11 at 14:06
feedback

This long blog post contains a lot of ways to do this: Accessing the System Clipboard with JavaScript – A Holy Grail?

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In browsers other than IE you need to use a small flash object to manipulate the clipboard, e.g.

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This is outdated now... check out the suggestion by GvS – fudgey Sep 20 '09 at 15:20
2  
The suggestion by GvS uses a flash movie? Isn't that the same idea? – TheEmirOfGroofunkistan Oct 8 '09 at 18:51
feedback

The other methods will copy plain text to the clipboard. To copy HTML (ie, you can paste results into a WSIWYG editor), you can do the following in IE ONLY. This is is fundamentally different from the other methods, as the browser actually visibly selects the content.

// create an editable DIV and append the HTML content you want copied
var editableDiv = document.createElement("div");
with (editableDiv) {
    contentEditable = true;
}     
editableDiv.appendChild(someContentElement);          

// select the editable content and copy it to the clipboard
var r = document.body.createTextRange();
r.moveToElementText(editableDiv);
r.select();  
r.execCommand("Copy");

// deselect, so the browser doesn't leave the element visibly selected
r.moveToElementText(someHiddenDiv);
r.select();
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feedback

One of the projects I've been working on, a jQuery copy-to-clipboard plugin that utilizes the Zero Clipboard library.

http://steamdev.com/zclip

Easier to use than native Zero Clipboard if you're a heavy jQuery user.

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doesn't work in FF4 – Mild Fuzz Jun 27 '11 at 22:13
feedback

As of Flash 10, you can only copy to clipboard if the action originates from user interaction with a Flash object. (Read related section from Adobe's Flash 10 announcement)

The solution is to overly a flash object above the Copy button, or whatever element initiates the copy. Zero Clipboard is currently the best library with this implementation. Experienced Flash developers may just want to make their own library.

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feedback

Looks like you took the code from Greasemonkey\JavaScript Copy to Clipboard button or the original source of this snippet...

This code was for Greasemonkey, hence the unsafeWindow. And I guess the syntax error in IE comes from the const keyword which is specific to Firefox (replace it with var).

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feedback

I had same problem building custom grid edit from (something like Excel) and compatibility with Excel. I had to support selecting multiple cells, copying and pasting. Solution: create textarea where you will be inserting data for user to copy (for me when user is selecting cells), set focus on it (for example, when user press ctrl) and select whole text. So, when user hit ctrl+c he gets copied cells he selected. After testing just resize textarea to 1px (I didn't test if it will be working on display:none). Works nicely on all browers, and it is transparent to user. Pasting - you could do same like this (differs on your target) - keep focus on textarea and catch paste event using onpaste (in my project I use textareas in cells to edit). I can't paste example (commercial project), but you got the idea.

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feedback

It seems I misread the question, but for reference, you can extract a range of the DOM (not to clipboard; compatible with all modern browsers), and combine it with the oncopy and onpaste and onbeforepaste events to get clipboard behaviour. Here's the code to achieve this:

function clipBoard(sCommand) {
  var oRange=contentDocument.createRange();
  oRange.setStart(startNode, startOffset);
  oRange.setEnd(endNode, endOffset);
/* This is where the actual selection happens.
in the above, startNode and endNode are dom nodes defining the beginning 
and end of the "selection" respectively. startOffset and endOffset are 
constants that are defined as follows:

END_TO_END: 2
END_TO_START: 3
NODE_AFTER: 1
NODE_BEFORE: 0
NODE_BEFORE_AND_AFTER: 2
NODE_INSIDE: 3
START_TO_END: 1
START_TO_START: 0

and would be used like oRange.START_TO_END */
      switch(sCommand) {
    case "cut":
          this.oFragment=oRange.extractContents();
      oRange.collapse();
      break;
    case "copy":
      this.oFragment=oRange.cloneContents();
      break;
    case "paste":
      oRange.deleteContents();
      var cloneFragment=this.oFragment.cloneNode(true)
      oRange.insertNode(cloneFragment);
      oRange.collapse();
      break;
  }
}
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Am I correct in saying that this only works on IE? – pimvdb Aug 17 '11 at 8:10
actually I corrected the code. It works in all browsers but doesn't actually copy to clipboard. Just extracts (cuts), clones (copies) content through variables. It seems I had forgotten the usage. – mrBorna Aug 17 '11 at 14:18
feedback

As far as I know that only works in IE.

But some googling I stubmled upon this page but it requires the user to change the configuration first and even then it doesn't seems to work.

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This is an expansion of @Chase's answer, with the advantage that it will work for IMAGE and TABLE elements, not just DIVs on IE9.

if (document.createRange) {
    // IE9 and modern browsers
    var r = document.createRange();
    r.setStartBefore(to_copy);
    r.setEndAfter(to_copy);
    r.selectNode(to_copy);
    var sel = window.getSelection();
    sel.addRange(r);
    document.execCommand('Copy');  // does nothing on FF
} else {
    // IE 8 and earlier.  This stuff won't work on IE9.
    // (unless forced into a backward compatibility mode,
    // or selecting plain divs, not img or table). 
    var r = document.body.createTextRange();
    r.moveToElementText(to_copy);
    r.select()
    r.execCommand('Copy');
}
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feedback

Building upon Jarek Milewski's answer (which I upvoted, because it is elegant and pure javascript) I have created the following script, which allows you to copy the (one-line) script to your browser's address bar and hit [ENTER] to run at any time from any web page:

javascript:  window.prompt ("Copy to clipboard: Ctrl+C, Enter", location.href);location.href = location.href;

This will allow the user to easily copy the current URL. Also, notice the last statement:
location.href = location.href;
That causes the browser to navigate back to the proper page, since (without that statement) most browsers will attempt to create a page that has the value of the button that the user clicked.
Try it, it's interesting and cool that you can run from the address bar.

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