I'm trying to make a basic Windows application that builds a string out of user input and then adds it to the clipboard. How do I copy a string to the clipboard using Python?
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4Related to this question.– glglglCommented Nov 15, 2012 at 13:48
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jaraco.clipboard does it (too): clipboard.copy(variable)– JinSnowCommented Nov 23, 2016 at 15:54
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Also see my answer to a related question about copying to the clipboard using Tkinter without showing a window. It includes a Python function that replaces/returns clipboard text using Tkinter.– EdwardCommented Oct 22, 2017 at 13:32
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For rich text, windows - Accessing alternate clipboard formats from python - Stack Overflow has some pointers.– user202729Commented Aug 23, 2023 at 8:56
32 Answers
Actually, pywin32 and ctypes seem to be an overkill for this simple task. tkinter is a cross-platform GUI framework, which ships with Python by default and has clipboard accessing methods along with other cool stuff.
If all you need is to put some text to system clipboard, this will do it:
from tkinter import Tk # in Python 2, use "Tkinter" instead
r = Tk()
r.withdraw()
r.clipboard_clear()
r.clipboard_append('i can has clipboardz?')
r.update() # now it stays on the clipboard after the window is closed
r.destroy()
And that's all, no need to mess around with platform-specific third-party libraries.
If you are using Python 2, replace tkinter with Tkinter.
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67Get contents of clipboard: result = r.selection_get(selection = "CLIPBOARD") Commented Jul 13, 2011 at 3:19
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39@SurDin Tkinter was renamed tkinter in python 3, so it depends on what version you're using. Commented Mar 27, 2012 at 0:53
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31all my apps get unresponsive after pasting the contents of the clipboard with this function, strangely, getting the result works fine. Commented Feb 2, 2013 at 20:53
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21It works if I don't call
r.destroy(). Once I call that, the clipboard becomes empty and pressing Ctrl-V may cause the target app to freeze. (OS: Windows 7 x64)– netvopeCommented Aug 24, 2013 at 3:45 -
12This is a good example for a very old outdated answer clinging on top, while you have to scroll down, looking at the “answered” dates to find the currently best way to do it. Commented May 7, 2021 at 8:11
I didn't have a solution, just a workaround.
Windows Vista onwards has an inbuilt command called clip that takes the output of a command from command line and puts it into the clipboard. For example, ipconfig | clip.
So I made a function with the os module which takes a string and adds it to the clipboard using the inbuilt Windows solution.
import os
def addToClipBoard(text):
command = 'echo ' + text.strip() + '| clip'
os.system(command)
# Example
addToClipBoard('penny lane')
# Penny Lane is now in your ears, eyes, and clipboard.
As previously noted in the comments however, one downside to this approach is that the echo command automatically adds a newline to the end of your text. To avoid this you can use a modified version of the command:
def addToClipBoard(text):
command = 'echo | set /p nul=' + text.strip() + '| clip'
os.system(command)
If you are using Windows XP it will work just following the steps in Copy and paste from Windows XP Pro's command prompt straight to the Clipboard.
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35
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2@WilliBallenthin then you need to wrap it in double quotes. But what if it CONTAINS double quotes? Then you need to double the double quotes.
text with " quotes and | pipebecomes"text with "" quotes and | pipe"Although this may have problems on systems with windows older than 95. Commented May 27, 2013 at 14:52 -
13Extremely insecure function... Content sent to your clipboard is now an entry vector and thus increases your attack surface.– Phil L.Commented Aug 21, 2014 at 12:13
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3I also need support for newlines, so I modified this to use
type. I write my text to file, and use the commandtype myfile.txt | clip. Commented Jan 26, 2016 at 14:06 -
1Although this is the best answer to me, it has an issue (Python 3.5, Windows 10); an unwanted newline is always added at the end of the string. How to avoid it?– mmjCommented Dec 10, 2016 at 10:55
The simplest way is with pyperclip. Works in python 2 and 3.
To install this library, use:
pip install pyperclip
Example usage:
import pyperclip
pyperclip.copy("your string")
If you want to get the contents of the clipboard:
clipboard_content = pyperclip.paste()
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pyperclip.paste()does not work with images just returnsNoneTypeerror. but works with right click and copy then using python to paste the copied results.– JayRizzoCommented Sep 9, 2019 at 23:38 -
2@JayRizzo the question doesn't ask about copying an image to the clipboard. However, you could use the ImageGrab.grabclipboard() module of the Pillow library (pip install Pillow).– mavizCommented Jan 20, 2021 at 6:14
You can use pyperclip - cross-platform clipboard module. Or Xerox - similar module, except requires the win32 Python module to work on Windows.
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pyperclipdoesn't do Unicode on Windows.win32clipboarddoes. Commented Dec 3, 2014 at 17:29 -
18My
pyperclippatch was accepted;c:\python34\Scripts\pip install --upgrade pyperclipto handle Unicode text. Commented Dec 5, 2014 at 14:02 -
2It took me a while to find out that this is
pyperclip, notpaperclip. Also, as on 2016, pyperclip works with Unicode characters too. I have tested characters ±°©©αβγθΔΨΦåäö to work on Win10 64-bit, with Python 3.5 and pyperclip 1.5.27. Commented Jul 3, 2016 at 15:55 -
1pyperclip also works on Mac and Linux too (not just Windows), which is nice. Commented Mar 4, 2021 at 15:39
You can use the excellent pandas, which has a built in clipboard support, but you need to pass through a DataFrame and call to_clipboard.
import pandas as pd
df = pd.DataFrame(['Text to copy'])
df.to_clipboard(index=False,header=False)
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4+1. I like this solution. It's even simpler than the accepted Tkinter solution. If you imported pandas anyways, there is no additional overhead. It also works across all platforms. It does not even (in most cases) require installing a new package.– ChaimGCommented Feb 2, 2017 at 18:04
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7
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5For most people (i.e. me),
pandasis readily available butimport pyperclipdoesn't work. So I don't agree with "better use pyperclip". Commented Jun 25, 2019 at 9:16 -
9If you're restricted to using just pandas, you could use pyperclip directly through
import pandas.io.clipboard as pyperclipor name it whatever you want. That's where it sits withinpandas, at least Commented Oct 29, 2019 at 18:36 -
3If you already have
pandasloaded and you don't want to keep the dataframe, this can be reduced to a single line:pd.DataFrame(['Text to copy']).to_clipboard(excel=False,index=False,header=False)Theexcel=Falseparameter removes the newline mentioned in the comment from @GijsvanOort– scignCommented Aug 26, 2021 at 17:22
Here's the most easy and reliable way I found if you're okay depending on Pandas. However I don't think this is officially part of the Pandas API so it may break with future updates. It works as of 0.25.3
from pandas.io import clipboard
clipboard.copy("test")
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2Works for me, except I might use
from pandas.io import clipboardthenclipboard.copy(...)to avoid confusion with othercopymethods. Commented Jul 29, 2020 at 19:47 -
5that is just a wrapper around pyperclip! (or to be more precise... pandas simply puts a copy of some pyperclip version into their src )– raphaelCommented Jun 29, 2022 at 11:16
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This is how it's done with more recent versions of pandas (tested with 1.4.1 and 2.1.1):
pandas.io.clipboards.to_clipboard(obj, excel=False)– mckbrdCommented Oct 31, 2023 at 11:12
You can also use ctypes to tap into the Windows API and avoid the massive pywin32 package. This is what I use (excuse the poor style, but the idea is there):
import ctypes
# Get required functions, strcpy..
strcpy = ctypes.cdll.msvcrt.strcpy
OpenClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.OpenClipboard # Basic clipboard functions
EmptyClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.EmptyClipboard
GetClipboardData = ctypes.windll.user32.GetClipboardData
SetClipboardData = ctypes.windll.user32.SetClipboardData
CloseClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.CloseClipboard
GlobalAlloc = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalAlloc # Global memory allocation
GlobalLock = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalLock # Global memory Locking
GlobalUnlock = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalUnlock
GMEM_DDESHARE = 0x2000
def Get():
OpenClipboard(None) # Open Clip, Default task
pcontents = GetClipboardData(1) # 1 means CF_TEXT.. too lazy to get the token thingy...
data = ctypes.c_char_p(pcontents).value
#GlobalUnlock(pcontents) ?
CloseClipboard()
return data
def Paste(data):
OpenClipboard(None) # Open Clip, Default task
EmptyClipboard()
hCd = GlobalAlloc(GMEM_DDESHARE, len(bytes(data,"ascii")) + 1)
pchData = GlobalLock(hCd)
strcpy(ctypes.c_char_p(pchData), bytes(data, "ascii"))
GlobalUnlock(hCd)
SetClipboardData(1, hCd)
CloseClipboard()
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5At least in python 2.6 x64, I had to change
bytes(data,"ascii")tobytes(data). Thanks for answering the question, I can't use pywin32 or tk or a number of other things and this works.– Pat CCommented Feb 8, 2013 at 21:37 -
1No worries, but note that the data returned from the clipboard is actually in another encoding, I believe it is Windows CP-1252. This was somewhat hacked together, but if you don't use the correct encoding then non-ascii characters will raise an error or decode incorrectly.– kapaceCommented Feb 13, 2013 at 5:33
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Variable names should not need comments, and everything should support Unicode. Commented Dec 4, 2014 at 14:03
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bytes(data, "mbcs")will work with windows default encoding. Allowed me to load this to the clipboard"másreas ç saod é í ó u* ü ö ï/"and read it back correctly.– mvbentesCommented May 12, 2016 at 17:18 -
2using mbcs gives me this: OSError: exception: access violation writing 0x0000000000000000 Commented Jan 20, 2019 at 21:59
Use pyperclip module
Install using pip pip install pyperclip.
Copy text "Hello World!" to clip board
import pyperclip
pyperclip.copy('Hello World!')
You can use Ctrl+V anywhere to paste this somewhere.
Paste the copied text using python
pyperclip.paste() # This returns the copied text of type <class 'str'>
I've tried various solutions, but this is the simplest one that passes my test:
#coding=utf-8
import win32clipboard # http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/
def copy(text):
win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
win32clipboard.EmptyClipboard()
win32clipboard.SetClipboardText(text, win32clipboard.CF_UNICODETEXT)
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()
def paste():
win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
data = win32clipboard.GetClipboardData(win32clipboard.CF_UNICODETEXT)
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()
return data
if __name__ == "__main__":
text = "Testing\nthe “clip—board”: 📋"
try: text = text.decode('utf8') # Python 2 needs decode to make a Unicode string.
except AttributeError: pass
print("%r" % text.encode('utf8'))
copy(text)
data = paste()
print("%r" % data.encode('utf8'))
print("OK" if text == data else "FAIL")
try: print(data)
except UnicodeEncodeError as er:
print(er)
print(data.encode('utf8'))
Tested OK in Python 3.4 on Windows 8.1 and Python 2.7 on Windows 7. Also when reading Unicode data with Unix linefeeds copied from Windows. Copied data stays on the clipboard after Python exits: "Testing
the “clip—board”: 📋"
If you want no external dependencies, use this code (now part of cross-platform pyperclip - C:\Python34\Scripts\pip install --upgrade pyperclip):
def copy(text):
GMEM_DDESHARE = 0x2000
CF_UNICODETEXT = 13
d = ctypes.windll # cdll expects 4 more bytes in user32.OpenClipboard(None)
try: # Python 2
if not isinstance(text, unicode):
text = text.decode('mbcs')
except NameError:
if not isinstance(text, str):
text = text.decode('mbcs')
d.user32.OpenClipboard(0)
d.user32.EmptyClipboard()
hCd = d.kernel32.GlobalAlloc(GMEM_DDESHARE, len(text.encode('utf-16-le')) + 2)
pchData = d.kernel32.GlobalLock(hCd)
ctypes.cdll.msvcrt.wcscpy(ctypes.c_wchar_p(pchData), text)
d.kernel32.GlobalUnlock(hCd)
d.user32.SetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT, hCd)
d.user32.CloseClipboard()
def paste():
CF_UNICODETEXT = 13
d = ctypes.windll
d.user32.OpenClipboard(0)
handle = d.user32.GetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT)
text = ctypes.c_wchar_p(handle).value
d.user32.CloseClipboard()
return text
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Where do you get
win32clipboard? It's not part of my Python 2.7. And why doespasteuseCF_TEXTinstead ofCF_UNICODETEXT? Commented Dec 4, 2014 at 15:42 -
@MarkRansom pywin32, and because my test worked fine until i made it harder using 📋. I've updated the code. Commented Dec 4, 2014 at 15:57
For some reason I've never been able to get the Tk solution to work for me. kapace's solution is much more workable, but the formatting is contrary to my style and it doesn't work with Unicode. Here's a modified version.
import ctypes
from ctypes.wintypes import BOOL, HWND, HANDLE, HGLOBAL, UINT, LPVOID
from ctypes import c_size_t as SIZE_T
OpenClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.OpenClipboard
OpenClipboard.argtypes = HWND,
OpenClipboard.restype = BOOL
EmptyClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.EmptyClipboard
EmptyClipboard.restype = BOOL
GetClipboardData = ctypes.windll.user32.GetClipboardData
GetClipboardData.argtypes = UINT,
GetClipboardData.restype = HANDLE
SetClipboardData = ctypes.windll.user32.SetClipboardData
SetClipboardData.argtypes = UINT, HANDLE
SetClipboardData.restype = HANDLE
CloseClipboard = ctypes.windll.user32.CloseClipboard
CloseClipboard.restype = BOOL
CF_UNICODETEXT = 13
GlobalAlloc = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalAlloc
GlobalAlloc.argtypes = UINT, SIZE_T
GlobalAlloc.restype = HGLOBAL
GlobalLock = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalLock
GlobalLock.argtypes = HGLOBAL,
GlobalLock.restype = LPVOID
GlobalUnlock = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalUnlock
GlobalUnlock.argtypes = HGLOBAL,
GlobalSize = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GlobalSize
GlobalSize.argtypes = HGLOBAL,
GlobalSize.restype = SIZE_T
GMEM_MOVEABLE = 0x0002
GMEM_ZEROINIT = 0x0040
unicode_type = type(u'')
def get():
text = None
OpenClipboard(None)
handle = GetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT)
pcontents = GlobalLock(handle)
size = GlobalSize(handle)
if pcontents and size:
raw_data = ctypes.create_string_buffer(size)
ctypes.memmove(raw_data, pcontents, size)
text = raw_data.raw.decode('utf-16le').rstrip(u'\0')
GlobalUnlock(handle)
CloseClipboard()
return text
def put(s):
if not isinstance(s, unicode_type):
s = s.decode('mbcs')
data = s.encode('utf-16le')
OpenClipboard(None)
EmptyClipboard()
handle = GlobalAlloc(GMEM_MOVEABLE | GMEM_ZEROINIT, len(data) + 2)
pcontents = GlobalLock(handle)
ctypes.memmove(pcontents, data, len(data))
GlobalUnlock(handle)
SetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT, handle)
CloseClipboard()
paste = get
copy = put
The above has changed since this answer was first created, to better cope with extended Unicode characters and Python 3. It has been tested in both Python 2.7 and 3.5, and works even with emoji such as \U0001f601 (😁).
Update 2021-10-26: This was working great for me in Windows 7 and Python 3.8. Then I got a new computer with Windows 10 and Python 3.10, and it failed for me the same way as indicated in the comments. This post gave me the answer. The functions from ctypes don't have argument and return types properly specified, and the defaults don't work consistently with 64-bit values. I've modified the above code to include that missing information.
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@CeesTimmerman I'd love to have a Windows 8.1 system to test why. I might have a chance to investigate later today. Are you sure you had text in the clipboard? Commented Dec 4, 2014 at 13:42
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Yes. I've extensively tested clipboard code in Python over the past three days. Commented Dec 4, 2014 at 13:44
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The
put()function also needs work; emoji "📋" (\U0001f400) is copied as "🐀" (\U0001f4cb), or "📋." turns to "📋". Commented Dec 5, 2014 at 9:20 -
@CeesTimmerman that explains it. The internal Unicode representation changed, I can't remember if it was 3.3 or 3.4. To fix it will require an explicit encoding to UTF-16. It's not a bug. Commented Dec 5, 2014 at 13:39
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1@YngvarKristiansen I finally got around to making those changes. I'm confident now that this code works for most modern versions of Python and every possible Unicode character. Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 5:20
Not all of the answers worked for my various python configurations so this solution only uses the subprocess module. However, copy_keyword has to be pbcopy for Mac or clip for Windows:
import subprocess
subprocess.run('copy_keyword', universal_newlines=True, input='New Clipboard Value 😀')
Here's some more extensive code that automatically checks what the current operating system is:
import platform
import subprocess
copy_string = 'New Clipboard Value 😀'
# Check which operating system is running to get the correct copying keyword.
if platform.system() == 'Darwin':
copy_keyword = 'pbcopy'
elif platform.system() == 'Windows':
copy_keyword = 'clip'
subprocess.run(copy_keyword, universal_newlines=True, input=copy_string)
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1
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@MaxDoesStuff Try it without the emoji. I don't know why that doesn't work in the default IDLE, but it works in other IDLEs. Commented Feb 25, 2020 at 23:59
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Python 3.11
subprocess.run()docs: "The universal_newlines argument is equivalent to text and is provided for backwards compatibility." Therefore it's simpler to replaceuniversal_newlines=Truewith justtext=True. Commented Sep 20, 2023 at 11:48
If you don't like the name you can use the derivative module clipboard.
Note: It's just a selective wrapper of pyperclip
After installing, import it:
import clipboard
Then you can copy like this:
clipboard.copy("This is copied")
You can also paste the copied text:
clipboard.paste()
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3This seems like the best solution. clipboard can be installed with
pip install clipboard.– vy32Commented Mar 27, 2020 at 17:50 -
5
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its a good solution for string. What about bytes ? any solution like this to copy bytes to clipboard in single line of python Commented Nov 16, 2021 at 4:49
Looks like you need to add win32clipboard to your site-packages. It's part of the pywin32 package
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3would be a much better answer with some example code. Commented Jun 21, 2018 at 12:23
I think there is a much simpler solution to this.
name = input('What is your name? ')
print('Hello %s' % (name) )
Then run your program in the command line
python greeter.py | clip
This will pipe the output of your file to the clipboard
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It's a good solution but I imagine a lot of the python is developed and run in an IDE Commented Aug 17, 2019 at 7:53
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Solution with stdlib, without security issues
The following solution works in Linux without any additional library and without the risk of executing unwanted code in your shell.
import subprocess
def to_clipboard(text: str) -> None:
sp = subprocess.Popen(["xclip"], stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
sp.communicate(text.encode("utf8"))
Note that there multiple clipboard in Linux, the you use with the Middle Mouse (Primary) and yet another that you use pressing STRG+C,STRG+V.
You can define which clipboard is used by adding a selection parameter i.e. ["xclip", "-selection", "clipboard"].
See the man xclip for details.
If you using Windows, just replace xclip with clip.
This solution works without Tkinter, which not available some Python installations (i.e. the custom build I am currently using).
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The
sp.communicatecall does not return, a possible solution is to add atimeout=t_in_secondsoptional argument, and catch the ensuingsubprocess.TimeoutExpiredexception.– gboffiCommented Oct 7, 2022 at 13:04 -
1I think thet better and simpler is
subprocess.run(["xclip"], input=text.encode("utf8"))Commented Dec 28, 2022 at 11:39 -
Widgets also have method named .clipboard_get() that returns the contents of the clipboard (unless some kind of error happens based on the type of data in the clipboard).
The clipboard_get() method is mentioned in this bug report:
http://bugs.python.org/issue14777
Strangely, this method was not mentioned in the common (but unofficial) online TkInter documentation sources that I usually refer to.
On Windows, you can use: pywin32.
Install it with: pip install pywin32.
Use it like this.
import win32clipboard
def to_clipboard(txt):
win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
win32clipboard.EmptyClipboard()
win32clipboard.SetClipboardText(txt)
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()
This works like a charm. It's cross platform with no dependencies. Tested on Linux and Windows.
import PySimpleGUI as sg
text = 'My text to clipboard'
# Set clipboard
sg.clipboard_set(text)
# Paste clipboard
new_text = sg.clipboard_get()
print(new_text)
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Thank you for the PySimpleGUI mention! It's great to see people have found the clipboard APIs and are using them. Commented Aug 15, 2023 at 12:31
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1
import wx
def ctc(text):
if not wx.TheClipboard.IsOpened():
wx.TheClipboard.Open()
data = wx.TextDataObject()
data.SetText(text)
wx.TheClipboard.SetData(data)
wx.TheClipboard.Close()
ctc(text)
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3An explanation of the problem and solution would be helpful.– showdevCommented Apr 14, 2015 at 18:16
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a function to copy text to a clipboard. using the wx python library (I never learnt TK) another solution to the question asked here.– jlkCommented Apr 14, 2015 at 20:30
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Feel free to edit the answer to include your explanation of problem/solution @jlk -- doing this generally makes answers more useful. Also, thanks for trying, but I suppose the original poster had some reason to ask for Tk specifically. Commented Apr 15, 2015 at 2:14
The snippet I share here take advantage of the ability to format text files: what if you want to copy a complex output to the clipboard ? (Say a numpy array in column or a list of something)
import subprocess
import os
def cp2clip(clist):
#create a temporary file
fi=open("thisTextfileShouldNotExist.txt","w")
#write in the text file the way you want your data to be
for m in clist:
fi.write(m+"\n")
#close the file
fi.close()
#send "clip < file" to the shell
cmd="clip < thisTextfileShouldNotExist.txt"
w = subprocess.check_call(cmd,shell=True)
#delete the temporary text file
os.remove("thisTextfileShouldNotExist.txt")
return w
works only for windows, can be adapted for linux or mac I guess. Maybe a bit complicated...
example:
>>>cp2clip(["ET","phone","home"])
>>>0
Ctrl+V in any text editor :
ET
phone
home
In addition to Mark Ransom's answer using ctypes: This does not work for (all?) x64 systems since the handles seem to be truncated to int-size. Explicitly defining args and return values helps to overcomes this problem.
import ctypes
import ctypes.wintypes as w
CF_UNICODETEXT = 13
u32 = ctypes.WinDLL('user32')
k32 = ctypes.WinDLL('kernel32')
OpenClipboard = u32.OpenClipboard
OpenClipboard.argtypes = w.HWND,
OpenClipboard.restype = w.BOOL
GetClipboardData = u32.GetClipboardData
GetClipboardData.argtypes = w.UINT,
GetClipboardData.restype = w.HANDLE
EmptyClipboard = u32.EmptyClipboard
EmptyClipboard.restype = w.BOOL
SetClipboardData = u32.SetClipboardData
SetClipboardData.argtypes = w.UINT, w.HANDLE,
SetClipboardData.restype = w.HANDLE
CloseClipboard = u32.CloseClipboard
CloseClipboard.argtypes = None
CloseClipboard.restype = w.BOOL
GHND = 0x0042
GlobalAlloc = k32.GlobalAlloc
GlobalAlloc.argtypes = w.UINT, w.ctypes.c_size_t,
GlobalAlloc.restype = w.HGLOBAL
GlobalLock = k32.GlobalLock
GlobalLock.argtypes = w.HGLOBAL,
GlobalLock.restype = w.LPVOID
GlobalUnlock = k32.GlobalUnlock
GlobalUnlock.argtypes = w.HGLOBAL,
GlobalUnlock.restype = w.BOOL
GlobalSize = k32.GlobalSize
GlobalSize.argtypes = w.HGLOBAL,
GlobalSize.restype = w.ctypes.c_size_t
unicode_type = type(u'')
def get():
text = None
OpenClipboard(None)
handle = GetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT)
pcontents = GlobalLock(handle)
size = GlobalSize(handle)
if pcontents and size:
raw_data = ctypes.create_string_buffer(size)
ctypes.memmove(raw_data, pcontents, size)
text = raw_data.raw.decode('utf-16le').rstrip(u'\0')
GlobalUnlock(handle)
CloseClipboard()
return text
def put(s):
if not isinstance(s, unicode_type):
s = s.decode('mbcs')
data = s.encode('utf-16le')
OpenClipboard(None)
EmptyClipboard()
handle = GlobalAlloc(GHND, len(data) + 2)
pcontents = GlobalLock(handle)
ctypes.memmove(pcontents, data, len(data))
GlobalUnlock(handle)
SetClipboardData(CF_UNICODETEXT, handle)
CloseClipboard()
#Test run
paste = get
copy = put
copy("Hello World!")
print(paste())
also you can use > clipboard
import clipboard
def copy(txt):
clipboard.copy(txt)
copy("your txt")
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1Or just:
copy = clipboard.copy, or even betterfrom clipboard import copy. Commented Oct 24, 2021 at 11:25
If (and only if) the application already uses Qt, you can use this (with the advantage of no additional third party dependency)
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication
clipboard = QApplication.clipboard()
# get text (if there's text inside instead of e.g. file)
clipboard.text()
# set text
clipboard.setText(s)
This requires a Qt application object to be already constructed, so it should not be used unless the application already uses Qt.
Besides, as usual, in X systems (and maybe other systems too), the content only persist until the application exists unless you use something like parcellite or xclipboard.
Documentation:
See also: python - PyQT - copy file to clipboard - Stack Overflow
This is an improved answer of atomizer. Note that
- there are 2 calls of
update()and - inserted
200 msdelay between them.
They protect freezing applications due to an unstable state of the clipboard:
from Tkinter import Tk
import time
r = Tk()
r.withdraw()
r.clipboard_clear()
r.clipboard_append('some string')
r.update()
time.sleep(.2)
r.update()
r.destroy()
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time.sleep doesnt work with tkinter.
r.afteris reccomended Commented Jul 17, 2021 at 4:19 -
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This doesn't strategy doesn't work with
tkinterwhen running a script in the console with Python 3.8 on Linux Mint. ObviouslyTkinterdoesn't exist in Python 3 at all.– JoooeeyCommented Jul 11 at 10:05 -
@Joooeey, you're right,
Tkintermodule is in Python 3 renamed totkinter.– MarianDCommented Jul 11 at 12:16 -
@MarianD And with
tkinterthis doesn't work under the conditions described above. Not sure if it works in any other environment.– JoooeeyCommented Jul 11 at 12:37
Pretty much, the best choice is tkinter.
It comes by default in python, and requires no requirements.
You can copy any text with it too!
Just try this:
import tkinter as _tk
def copy(text):
root = _tk.Tk()
root.withdraw()
root.clipboard_clear()
root.clipboard_append(text)
root.destroy()
del root
And you can now use copy() function to copy any text you want! (if its a string)
But, if you want to get text from clipboard, you can use this.
import tkinter as _tk
def paste():
root = _tk.Tk()
root.withdraw()
text = root.clipboard_get()
root.destroy()
del root
return text
To avoid introducing pyperclip as a dependency, this should work on all Windows and macOS machines, as well as on most of Linux and FreeBSD configurations:
import platform
import shutil
import subprocess
def copy_to_clipboard(text: str) -> None:
"""Copy text to the clipboard."""
match os := platform.system():
case "Windows":
cmd = "clip"
case "Darwin":
cmd = "pbcopy"
case "Linux" | "FreeBSD":
for cmd in ("xclip", "xsel"):
if shutil.which(cmd):
break
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
f"If your {os} machine does not use xclip or xsel, please "
"use 'pyperclip' PyPi to copy text to the clipboard."
)
case _:
raise NotImplementedError(f"Operating system {os} is not supported.")
subprocess.run(cmd, text=True, check=False, input=text)
Use python's clipboard library!
import clipboard as cp
cp.copy("abc")
Clipboard contains 'abc' now. Happy pasting!
-
2Where do you get
clipboardfrom? It isn't in the standard library for Anaconda Python 3.7, at least. Commented Jul 29, 2020 at 19:52 -
2
clipboardsimply importspyperclip. Really. Nothing more. Commented May 7, 2021 at 8:08
You can use winclip32 module! install:
pip install winclip32
to copy:
import winclip32
winclip32.set_clipboard_data(winclip32.UNICODE_STD_TEXT, "some text")
to get:
import winclip32
print(winclip32.get_clipboard_data(winclip32.UNICODE_STD_TEXT))
for more informations: https://pypi.org/project/winclip32/
My multiplatform solution base on this question:
import subprocess
import distutils.spawn
def clipit(text):
if distutils.spawn.find_executable("xclip"):
# for Linux
subprocess.run(["xclip", "-i"], input=text.encode("utf8"))
elif distutils.spawn.find_executable("xsel"):
# for Linux
subprocess.run(["xsel", "--input"], input=text.encode("utf8"))
elif distutils.spawn.find_executable("clip"):
# for Windows
subprocess.run(["clip"], input=text.encode("utf8"))
else:
import pyperclip
print("I use module pyperclip.")
pyperclip.copy(text)
For Windows without requiring pyperclip, also supports multiple lines.
import tempfile
import subprocess
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False) as tmp:
tmp.write(string.encode())
tmp.close()
cmd = 'type ' + tmp.name + '|clip'
subprocess.check_call(cmd, shell=True)
-
1Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Stack Overflow community. This question already has quite a few answers—including one that has been extensively validated by the community. Are you certain your approach hasn’t been given previously? If so, it would be useful to explain how your approach is different, under what circumstances your approach might be preferred, and/or why you think the previous answers aren’t sufficient. Can you kindly edit your answer to offer an explanation? Commented Apr 11 at 0:17