I have an area selected in Vim. How can I copy it into the OS X clipboard?
(The OS X clipboard can be written to via a pipe to /usr/bin/pbcopy
)
For MacVim and Windows Gvim, simply add the following to your ~/.vimrc
:
set clipboard=unnamed
Now all operations such as yy
, D
, and P
work with the clipboard. No need to prefix them with "*
or "+
.
-v
flag (mvim -v
). I have mine aliased to vim and mvim.
:echo has("clipboard")
says 1
, which is the case for MacVim, and I have a vi
alias that runs mvim -v
instead
Mar 6, 2015 at 20:35
:version
shows you -clipboard
then the build of Vim doesn't support the clipboard feature. I was talking about MacVim, which is a GUI app.
Nov 5, 2015 at 1:38
If the clipboard is enabled, you can copy a selected region to the clipboard by hitting "*y
To see if it is enabled, run vim --version
and look for +clipboard
or -clipboard
. For example, it's not enabled by default on my 10.5.6 box:
% which vim /usr/bin/vim % vim --version VIM - Vi IMproved 7.2 (2008 Aug 9, compiled Nov 11 2008 17:20:43) Included patches: 1-22 Compiled by [email protected] Normal version without GUI. Features included (+) or not (-): ... -clientserver -clipboard +cmdline_compl +cmdline_hist +cmdline_info +comments ...
If it had been compiled with +clipboard
, I'd be able to use the "*
register to access the system clipboard.
I downloaded the 7.2 source and compiled it (easy as tar xjf vim-7.2.tar.bz && cd vim72 && ./configure && make && sudo make install
), and the clipboard was enabled:
% which vim /usr/local/bin/vim % vim --version VIM - Vi IMproved 7.2 (2008 Aug 9, compiled Mar 24 2009 17:31:52) Compiled by [email protected] Normal version with GTK2 GUI. Features included (+) or not (-): ... +clientserver +clipboard +cmdline_compl +cmdline_hist +cmdline_info +comments ...
However, even after compiling, I couldn't copy to the clipboard when running vim in Terminal.app, only in X11.app.
:echo has("clipboard")
. If it shows 0, it's not compiled in. If it shows 1, it is.
brew install vim
Apr 28, 2015 at 7:16
+clipboard
version, but had installed --with-client-server
which enables +x11
, and trying to copy/paste to x11 in terminal vim on macOS didn't work :) I had to reinstall without +clientserver
.
You can visually select text and type :w !pbcopy<CR>
Or you can include the below key mappings in your ~/.vimrc
file. They cut/copy text in visual mode to the operating system's clipboard.
vmap <C-x> :!pbcopy<CR>
vmap <C-c> :w !pbcopy<CR><CR>
Depending on which version of Vim I use, I'm able to use the +
register to access the clipboard.
"Mac OS X clipboard sharing" may have some ideas that work for you as well.
"+
register exists only for X11 (unless you build vim with +X11 support, which will install a X11 server XQuartz in OS X), while OS X doesn't use X11 as its windows system.
vim
and macvim
have +clipboard. And clipboard=unnamed
added to ~/.vimrc
? Looks like real pain, tried all workarounds and currently have to use spacemacs, when I know, that I'll have to use global clipboard :)
Feb 19, 2017 at 19:26
double-quote asterisk ("*) before any yank command will yank the results into the copy buffer. That works for Windows and Linux too.
On macos 10.8, vim is compiled with -clipboard
so to use "*y
you'll need to
recompile. Luckily brew install vim
would compile a new version easily for you
and it will be +clipboard
.
brew install vim
with updates vi
, and not vim
. So you might have to alias things differently after installing vim with homebrew.
Jan 25, 2019 at 23:36
Visually select the text and type:
ggVG
!tee >(pbcopy)
Which I find nicer than:
ggVG
:w !pbcopy
Since it doesn't flash up a prompt: "Press ENTER or type command to continue"
If you are using MacPorts you can upgrade your VIM to include clipboard support via:
port install vim +x +x11
Now you use the "+
register to yank your text directly to your Mac clipboard. Works like a charm.
If you are on MacOS X:
$ brew install vim
$ vim --version
VIM - Vi IMproved 7.4 [...]
Then, add to your .vimrc:
set clipboard=unnamed
Now you just need to be in vim and do :%y
, to have all the content copied to your clipboard.
Use Homebrew's vim: brew install vim
Mac (as of 10.10.3 Yosemite) comes pre-installed with a system vim that does not have the clipboard
flag enabled.
You can either compile vim for yourself and enable that flag, or simply use Homebrew's vim which is setup properly.
To see this for yourself, check out the stock system vim with /usr/bin/vim --version
You'll see something like:
$ /usr/bin/vim --version
VIM - Vi IMproved 7.3 (2010 Aug 15, compiled Nov 5 2014 21:00:28)
Compiled by [email protected]
Normal version without GUI. Features included (+) or not (-):
... -clientserver -clipboard +cmdline_compl ...
Note the -clipboard
With homebrew's vim you instead get
$ /usr/local/bin/vim --version
VIM - Vi IMproved 7.4 (2013 Aug 10, compiled May 10 2015 14:04:42)
MacOS X (unix) version
Included patches: 1-712
Compiled by Homebrew
Huge version without GUI. Features included (+) or not (-):
... +clipboard ...
Note the +clipboard
V
then :w !pbcopy
and it worked
If your Vim is not compiled with clipboards, you wish to copy selected text instead of entire lines, you do not want to install MacVim or other GUI, the simplest solution is to add this line to your .vimrc:
map <C-c> y:e ~/clipsongzboard<CR>P:w !pbcopy<CR><CR>:bdelete!<CR>
To use it, simply visually select the text you want to copy, and then Control-C. If you want a full explanation of this line read "How to Copy to clipboard on vim".
I used:
map <C-x> :!pbcopy<CR>
vmap <C-c> :w !pbcopy<CR><CR>
It worked really well.
You can use MacVim when you're on a Mac to easily access the clipboard using the standard OS keys.
It's also fully backward compatible with normal Vim, so I don't even have to have a separate .vimrc
.
~/bin
to override the defaults.
Dec 9, 2019 at 20:38
command-C? This at least works for the vim launched from within Terminal.app for text selected with mouse.
My main problem was the default OSX version of Vim. Installing it via homebrew added +clipboard
to the build.
You can check with:
vim --version
to see if it says -clipboard
or +clipboard
.
if you have the +clipboard
option on your Vim installation (you can check with :version
) and you are in visual mode you can do "+y
This will yank the selection to the buffer +
that is the clipboard.
I have added the following maps to my vimrc and it works fine.
vmap <leader>y "+y
: With this I can do leader key
follow by y
to copy to the clipboard in visual mode.
nmap <leader>p "+p
: With this I can do leader key
follow by p
to paste from the clipboard on normal mode.
PD : On Ubuntu I had to install vim-gtk to get the +clipboard
option.
What worked for me in my .vimrc
set clipboard=unnamed
if has("unnamedplus") " X11 support
set clipboard+=unnamedplus
endif
I am currently on OS X 10.9 and my efforts to compile vim with +xterm_clipboard brought me nothing. So my current solution is to use MacVim in terminal mode with option set clipboard=unnamed
in my ~/.vimrc file. Works perfect for me.
For Mac - Holding option
key followed by ctrl V
while selecting the text did the trick.
Shift cmd c – set copy mode Drag mouse, select text, cmd c to copy selected text Cmd v to paste
Best way to to use mapping.
For example:
nnoremap C "+y
vnoremap C "+y
nnoremap cC ^"+y$
This will map capital C to yank into the clipboard, without changing anything. Works with any vim.
For Ubuntu users, the package you want to retrieve for using the clipboard is vim-full. The other packages (vim-tiny, vim) do not include the clipboard feature.
Copying to clipboard using register '+' or '*' is not working?
Reason: Your particular version of vim was compiled without clipboard support.Type vim --verion on console and you will see -xterm_clipboard. Installing vim with gui packages solves this issue. On ubuntu you can do this by typing on shell:
sudo apt-get install vim-gui-common
Now again do vim --version on console. Most probably, you would be seeing +xterm_clipboard now!!
So, now you can copy anything to clipboard using register + (like "+yy to copy current line to clipboard)
on mac when anything else seems to work - select with mouse, right click choose copy. uff
I meet the same issue, after install macvim
still not working, finally I found a way to solve:
Try to uninstall all vim first,
brew uninstall macvim
brew uninstall --force vim
and reinstall macvim
brew install macvim --with-override-system-vim
Then you can use "*y
or "+y
, don't have to set clipboard=unnamed
Command-c works for me in both MacVim and in the terminal.
"+y
.+clipboard
or+xterm-clipboard
. You can verify this withvim --version | grep clipboard
. It's possible to resolve this withbrew install vim --with-client-server
.~/bin
and then~/bin
can be inserted into your path ahead of the normal system-installed vim and synonyms.alias vi='mvim -v'
2) Added the following to ~/.vimrc, which maps Ctrl+c (not Cmd+c):vnoremap <C-c> "+y
3) Configured Keyboard Maestro to type the key sequence^c
(Ctrl+C) when running in the terminal (in my case iTerm2) This makes it possible to use Cmd+c to copy text to the OSX clipboard so that it can be pasted in other OSX applications.