632

How can I pipe the output of a command into my clipboard and paste it back when using a terminal? For instance:

cat file | clipboard
4

21 Answers 21

678

I always wanted to do this and found a nice and easy way of doing it. I wrote down the complete procedure just in case anyone else needs it.

First install a 16 kB program called xclip:

sudo apt-get install xclip

You can then pipe the output into xclip to be copied into the clipboard:

cat file | xclip

To paste the text you just copied, you shall use:

xclip -o

To simplify life, you can set up an alias in your .bashrc file as I did:

alias "c=xclip"
alias "v=xclip -o"

To see how useful this is, imagine I want to open my current path in a new terminal window (there may be other ways of doing it like Ctrl+T on some systems, but this is just for illustration purposes):

Terminal 1:
pwd | c

Terminal 2:
cd `v`

Notice the ` ` around v. This executes v as a command first and then substitutes it in-place for cd to use.

Only copy the content to the X clipboard

cat file | xclip

If you want to paste somewhere else other than a X application, try this one:

cat file | xclip -selection clipboard
12
  • 177
    "cat file | xclip" only copy the content to the 'X' clipboard, if you want to paste somewhere else other than a 'X' application, try this one: "cat file | xclip -selection clipboard" – khotyn Feb 27 '11 at 3:09
  • 7
    Your choice of handle is appropriate! – Matt Joiner Feb 28 '11 at 2:23
  • 4
    If you want to remove the newline character so that you can directly paste and edit the result of "pwd | c", you can do "pwd | tr -d '\n' | xclip -selection c" – Anake Jun 6 '13 at 17:43
  • 14
    also define alias "cs=xclip -selection clipboard" and alias "vs=xclip -o -selection clipboard" to make copying/pasting from system clipboard easier – Yibo Yang Jan 6 '16 at 19:20
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    I am not sure but I am getting following error Error: Can't open display: (null) @Legend – alper Dec 24 '18 at 14:10
220

On OS X, use pbcopy; pbpaste goes in the opposite direction.

pbcopy < .ssh/id_rsa.pub
6
73

I've created a tool for Linux/OSX/Cygwin that is similar to some of these others but slightly unique. I call it cb and it can be found in this github gist.

In that gist I demonstrate how to do copy and paste via commandline using Linux, macOS, and Cygwin.

Linux

_copy(){
    cat | xclip -selection clipboard
}

_paste(){
    xclip -selection clipboard -o
}

macOS

_copy(){
    cat | pbcopy
}

_paste(){
    pbpaste
}

Cygwin

_copy(){
    cat > /dev/clipboard
}

_paste(){
    cat /dev/clipboard
}

Note: I originally just intended to mention this in my comment to Bob Enohp's answer. But then I realized that I should add a README to my gist. Since the gist editor doesn't offer a Markdown preview I used the answer box here and after copy/pasting it to my gist thought, "I might as well submit the answer."

cb

A leak-proof tee to the clipboard

This script is modeled after tee (see man tee).

It's like your normal copy and paste commands, but unified and able to sense when you want it to be chainable

Examples

Copy

$ date | cb
# clipboard contains: Tue Jan 24 23:00:00 EST 2017

Paste

# clipboard retained from the previous block
$ cb
Tue Jan 24 23:00:00 EST 2017
$ cb | cat
Tue Jan 24 23:00:00 EST 2017
$ cb > foo
$ cat foo
Tue Jan 24 23:00:00 EST 2017

Chaining

$ date | cb | tee updates.log
Tue Jan 24 23:11:11 EST 2017
$ cat updates.log
Tue Jan 24 23:11:11 EST 2017
# clipboard contains: Tue Jan 24 23:11:11 EST 2017

Copy via file redirect

(chronologically it made sense to demo this at the end)

# clipboard retained from the previous block
$ cb < foo
$ cb
Tue Jan 24 23:00:00 EST 2017
# note the minutes and seconds changed from 11 back to 00
1
48

I wrote this little script that takes the guess work out of the copy/paste commands.

The Linux version of the script relies on xclip being already installed in your system. The script is called clipboard.

#!/bin/bash
# Linux version
# Use this script to pipe in/out of the clipboard
#
# Usage: someapp | clipboard     # Pipe someapp's output into clipboard
#        clipboard | someapp     # Pipe clipboard's content into someapp
#

if command -v xclip 1>/dev/null; then
    if [[ -p /dev/stdin ]] ; then
        # stdin is a pipe
        # stdin -> clipboard
        xclip -i -selection clipboard
    else
        # stdin is not a pipe
        # clipboard -> stdout
        xclip -o -selection clipboard
    fi
else
    echo "Remember to install xclip"
fi

The OS X version of the script relies on pbcopy and pbpaste which are preinstalled on all Macs.

#!/bin/bash
# OS X version
# Use this script to pipe in/out of the clipboard
#
# Usage: someapp | clipboard     # Pipe someapp's output into clipboard
#        clipboard | someapp     # Pipe clipboard's content into someapp
#

if [[ -p /dev/stdin ]] ; then
    # stdin is a pipe
    # stdin -> clipboard
    pbcopy
else
    # stdin is not a pipe
    # clipboard -> stdout
    pbpaste
fi

Using the script is very simple since you simply pipe in or out of clipboard as shown in these two examples.

$ cat file | clipboard

$ clipboard | less
6
  • 3
    I use the names pbcopy and pbpaste on Linux so it works for both Linux and OS X. – StackedCrooked Jan 17 '14 at 14:50
  • To make the script work globally in ubuntu: * Save it at ~/.scripts/clipboard * Make it executable chmod +x ~/.scripts/clipboard for bash: * add export PATH=$PATH:~/.scripts to the end of ~/.bashrc for fish: * add set PATH ~/.scripts $PATH to ~/.config/fish/fish.config If any of the files or folders don't already exist just create them. – Hockey Apr 27 '15 at 7:20
  • 2
    You can also wrap this script as a function clipboard(){ ... } and paste it into .bashrc – Sebastian Nowak Jun 9 '15 at 19:41
  • This is very similar to the one I made, but I allow chaining like date | cb | tee -a updates.log. That would send the date command output to the clipboard and pass it along to the tee -a command which appends it to a file and passes it along to stdout. But it's like a "leak-proof tee to the clipboard" because if you just do date | cb you get no output. And finally it also does cb > file.txt gist.github.com/RichardBronosky/… – Bruno Bronosky Jan 25 '17 at 4:24
  • One suggestion - strip the trailing newline character to avoid executing the command on pasting(e.g. if copy-pasting a path). I do that by modifying the command xclip -i -selection clipboard to xargs echo -n | xclip -i -selection clipboard – Ivaylo Strandjev May 25 '17 at 7:52
25

Add this to to your ~/.bashrc:

# Now `cclip' copies and `clipp' pastes'
alias cclip='xclip -selection clipboard'
alias clipp='xclip -selection clipboard -o'

Now clipp pastes and cclip copies — but you can also do fancier stuff:

clipp | sed 's/^/    /' | cclip

↑ indents your clipboard; good for sites without stack overflow's { } button

You can add it by running this:

printf "\nalias clipp=\'xclip -selection c -o\'\n" >> ~/.bashrc
printf "\nalias cclip=\'xclip -selection c -i\'\n" >> ~/.bashrc
1
10

Without using external tools, if you are connecting to the server view SSH, this is a relatively easy command:

From a Windows 7+ command prompt:

ssh user@server cat /etc/passwd | clip

This will put the content of the remote file to your local clipboard.

(The command requires running Pageant for the key, or it will ask you for a password.)

3
  • 1
    @AfshinMoazami, the title and the question itself is generic, Only the tags hint for unix system, and my answer covers the case when you try to get the date FROM a unix server TO a Windows machine, which may be useful future readers. – d.raev Sep 7 '15 at 14:46
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    Upvoted because yes, useful to Windows admins who only have Powershell to play with locally (although now with LSW actually functional, I can drop into bash directly from Powershell and do my *nixy things from there). – flith May 26 '17 at 7:59
  • Its working on DOS prompt as well as git bash on windows 10 i.e. echo Hello World | clip – user7154703 Nov 14 '18 at 5:54
9

For mac this is an example way to copy (into clipboard) paste (from clipboard) using command line

Copy the result of pwd command to clipboard as

$ pwd | pbcopy

Use the content in the clipboard as

$ cd $(pbpaste)
8

I am using Parcellite and xsel to copy last commit message from git to my clipboard manager (for some reason xclip does not work):

$ git log -1 --pretty=%B | xsel -i -b
1
8

Linux & Windows (WSL)

When using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (e.g. Ubuntu/Debian on WSL) the xclip solution won't work. Instead you need to use clip.exe and powershell.exe to copy into and paste from the Windows clipboard.

.bashrc

This solution works on "real" Linux-based systems (i.e. Ubuntu, Debian) as well as on WSL systems. Just put the following code into your .bashrc:

if grep -q -i microsoft /proc/version; then
    # on WSL
    alias copy="clip.exe"
    alias paste="powershell.exe Get-Clipboard"
else
    # on "normal" linux
    alias copy="xclip -sel clip"
    alias paste="xclip -sel clip -o"
fi

How it works

The file /proc/version contains information about the currently running OS. When the system is running in WSL mode, then this file additionally contains the string Microsoft which is checked by grep.

Usage

To copy:

cat file | copy

And to paste:

paste > new_file
5

I usually run this command when I have to copy my ssh-key:

cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | pbcopy

cmd+v or ctrl+v anywhere else.

1
  • I also found this is more natural on OS X, the up-voted one: pbcopy < command didn't work for me. – galactica Apr 12 at 18:44
4

I made a small tool providing similar functionality, without using xclip or xsel. stdout is copied to a clipboard and can be pasted again in the terminal. See:

https://sourceforge.net/projects/commandlinecopypaste/

Note, that this tool does not need an X-session. The clipboard can just be used within the terminal and has not to be pasted by Ctrl+V or middle-mouse-click into other X-windows.

0
4

For those using bash installed on their windows system (known as Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)), attempting xclip will give an error:

Error: Can't open display: (null)

Instead, recall that linux subsystem has access to windows executables. It's possible to use clip.exe like

echo hello | clip.exe

which allows you to use the paste command (ctrl-v).

1
  • 1
    Do note that if an xserver (such as vcxsvr or xming) is installed on windows, a display is up and xclipboard is running, you can actually use xclip seemlessly. – user3434588 Sep 16 '18 at 0:42
3

In Linux with xclip installed:

xclip -selection clipboard < file

0
3

I come from a stripped down KDE background and do not have access to xclip, xsel or the other fancy stuff. I have a TCSH Konsole to make matters worse.

Requisites: qdbus klipper xargs bash

Create a bash executable foo.sh.

#!/bin/bash
qdbus org.kde.klipper /klipper setClipboardContents "$1" > /dev/null

Note: This needs to be bash as TCSH does not support multi-line arguments.

Followed by a TCSH alias in the.cshrc.

alias clipboard xargs -0 /path/to/foo

Explanation:

xargs -0 pipes stdin into a single argument. This argument is passed to the bash executable which sends a "copy to clipboard" request to klipper using qdbus. The pipe to /dev/null is to not print the newline character returned by qdbus to the console.

Example Usage:

ls | clipboard

This copies the contents of the current folder into the clipboard.

Note: Only works as a pipe. Use the bash executable directly if you need to copy an argument.

3

on Wayland xcopy doesn't seem to work, use wl-clipboard instead. e.g. on fedora

sudo dnf install wl-clipboard

tree | wl-copy

wl-paste > file
2

Based on previous posts, I ended up with the following light-weigh alias solution that can be added to .bashrc:

if [ -n "$(type -P xclip)" ]
then
  alias xclip='xclip -selection clipboard'
  alias clipboard='if [ -p /dev/stdin ]; then xclip -in; fi; xclip -out'
fi

Examples:

# Copy
$ date | clipboard
Sat Dec 29 14:12:57 PST 2018

# Paste
$ date
Sat Dec 29 14:12:57 PST 2018

# Chain
$ date | clipboard | wc
   1       6      29
1

Here's great solution for Arch Linux users. Install xsel with pacman, like:

sudo pacman -S xsel

Create alias in ~/.bashrc file, like:

alias pbcopy='xsel --clipboard --input'
alias pbpaste='xsel --clipboard --output'

reload your terminal with source:

source ~/.bashrc

use it like mentions above:

cat your_file.txt | pbcopy

fyi, good practice stroing all of the aliases in ~/.aliases and call it in .bashrc file

1

2021 Answer

If you were searching for an answer to the question, "How do I copy the output of one command into my clipboard to use for my next command?" like I was, then this solution works great as a Mac user.

In my example, I wanted to simply copy the output of $ which postgres so I could simply paste it in my next command.

I solved this by piping my first command $ which postgres with $ pbcopy.

which postgres | pbcopy

Then I could simply command + V which produced my desired result:

/usr/local/bin/postgres
0

Just to cover an edge case:) and because the question title asks (at least now) how to copy the output of a command directly to clipboard.

Often times I find it useful to copy the output of the command after it was already executed and I don’t want to or can’t execute the command again.

For this scenario, we can either use gdm or a similar mouse utility and select using the mouse. apt-get install gdm and then either the right click or the Cntrl+Shift+c and Cntrl+Shift+v combinations for copy and paste in the terminal

Or, which is the preferred method for me (as the mouse cannot select properly inside one pane when you have multiple panes side by side and you need to select more than one line), using tmux we can copy into the tmux buffer using the standard [ , space , move to select , enter or you can select a block of code. Also this is particularly useful when you are inside one of the lanes of the cli multiplexer like tmux AND you need to select a bunch of text, but not the line numbers (my vim setup renders line numbers)

After this you can use the command:

tmux save-buffer - | xclip -i

You can of course alias it to something you like or bind directly in the tmux configuration file

This is just to give you a conceptual answer to cover this edge case when it’s not possible to execute the command again. If you need more specific code examples, let me know

Cheers

0

macOS:

pbcopy < your_command_which_gives_output

WSL / GNU/Linux (requires the xclip package):

xclip -sel clip < your_command_which_gives_output

Git Bash on Windows:

your_command_which_gives_output | clip
0

With sudo privileges:

echo '#!/usr/bin/python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import sys
from tkinter import Tk
r = Tk()
r.withdraw()
r.clipboard_clear()
data = ""
for i in sys.stdin:
        data = data + i
r.clipboard_append(data)
r.update()
r.destroy()' | sudo tee /usr/bin/copy > /dev/null
sudo chmod +x /usr/bin/copy

Alternatively without sudo privileges (only for one user):

echo '#!/usr/bin/python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import sys
from tkinter import Tk
r = Tk()
r.withdraw()
r.clipboard_clear()
data = ""
for i in sys.stdin:
        data = data + i
r.clipboard_append(data)
r.update()
r.destroy()' > ~/.local/bin/copy
chmod +x ~/.local/bin/copy

Usage:

echo "hi" | copy
4
  • That looks convoluted, what are the benefits compared to existing answers which use xsel? – Anton Krug Apr 10 at 15:43
  • 1
    you dont have to install anything – awdr Apr 10 at 19:10
  • I would say that a single standalone xsel binary is nothing compared to the huge python3 framework. Some people might have xsel already installed, while not having python3. On top of that, your python script depends on the tkinter, which might not be installed as well. If the motivation of this answer to provide something with fewer dependencies, then I think it's exact opposite. – Anton Krug Apr 10 at 20:05
  • On most linux systems is python already installed and tkinter is also includet. – awdr Apr 11 at 8:55

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