The clipping will still be viewable in your stack, and you can navigate that by fiddling with your arrow keys and Home and End buttons easily. Once you’ve selected a text from there, Jumpcut places it in a pasteboard and attempts to automatically paste it where you position your cursor. The preferences panel allows you to customize a large number of settings, several of which should be documented here but will have to wait for another day.Jumpcut was designed by its developers for providing “quick, natural and intuitive” access to the user’s clipboard history, and in that sense, the app is simple and straightforward enough. Notably, its minimalism can be taken for a lack of UI/UX sense.Īfter installation and launching the app, any text item that you cut or copy will be piled on a “stack” of clippings that can be accessed under the menu bar or through a pop-up that’s activated by pressing a customizable hotkey. You can also Option-Click the Flycut menu icon to disable or reenable clipboard tracking, in case you are copying sensitive information such as passwords. The Flycut menu allows you to select from the most recent items in the main clipboard history store, clear all of them, merge them all into one entry, or access the preferences panel. The favorites store appears in the Bezel and works in the same way as the main clipboard history store, aside from having a yellow tint to the Bezel.į: Save the clipboard history item currently displayed to the favorites store, deleting it from the main clipboard history store and closing the Bezel. "Desktop/Clipping at 08.35.10.txt"į: Switch between the main clipboard history store and the favorites store. Clipping is saved to a file on the Desktop, akin to how Screen Shots are saved by OS X. Delete the item from the clipboard history if capital S was pressed. S or S: Save the clipboard history item currently displayed to a file, closing the Bezel. PgUp: Move forward ten positions in your clipboard history.īackspace or Delete: Delete the clipboard history item currently displayed, closing the Bezel.ġ through 9 and 0: Move to the clipboard history position indicated by the number, or position 10 for zero. PgDn: Move backward ten positions in your clipboard history. Home: Move to the most recent item in your clipboard history.Įnd: Move to the least recent item in your clipboard history. Return: Paste the clipboard history item currently displayed, closing the Bezel.Įsc: Close the bezel without pasting, preserving bezel position in the history.Įnter (Fn-Return): Move the clipboard history item currently displayed to the front of the history, closing the Bezel.Ĭommand-,: Display the Flycut preferences panel. Up Arrow or Left Arrow: Move forward in your clipboard history. Here's a complete list of keys you can use in the Bezel.ĭown Arrow or Right Arrow: Move backward in your clipboard history. If you don't want to paste, just press the Esc key. When you find something you want to paste, press Return and it is pasted while the Bezel closes automatically. If "sticky bezel" option is enabled, there is no need to hold the command key. To get started, just use the up and down arrow keys while holding the command key to step through your history. It's the semi-transparent box that appears in the middle of your screen, showing you your clipboard history. The Bezel is what you see when you press the Main Hotkey. Or just use the Flycut menu (that little red locker, like the one you see above. Press the Main Hotkey (Shift-Command-v, by default) to access your clipboard history.
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