The tilda key is the one normally right underneath the ESC key or immediately to the left of the 1(!) key. ![]() Press and hold CTRL and then press the tilda key and the little clipboard manager will popup wherever your cursor is located. Now to paste anything from the list, you can do one of three things:ġ) Double-click on the item in the last and it will be pasted into the currently active window or text boxĢ) Drag and drop the item from the list into the location you want to paste it toģ) Press CTRL + number, where number can be from 1 to 10. The quickest option for me is to use method 3 since it only requires using the keyboard. Once you have a whole bunch of clips, you can open the clipboard manager using the CTRL + tilda shortcut and then just start typing. You don’t have to click in the search box, which is convenient. The results will be filtered immediately and then you can just double-click on the item to have it pasted. There are way too many options to go through in this article, but you can play around with everything by right-clicking anywhere in the list and choosing Options. In addition to options, when right-clicking on a clip, you’ll see a bunch of other options that you can adjust from the menu. These include being able to edit the clip, see the details about the clip like when it was created and last used, having the ability to make the clip sticky so that it is always at the top or bottom, deleting a clip, pasting a text clip as plain text only, etc. ![]() In the Options dialog, there are basically 5 tabs full of settings and options, which is way too much to explain in detail. Thankfully, they have a help page that explains each option in detail so you don’t have to try and figure out what it does. The only thing to note is that sometimes when you try to paste, nothing seems to happen. In reality, Ditto couldn’t figure out where to paste the item so it just copied it to the clipboard. If you press CTRL + V, that item that you selected in Ditto should paste properly. ArsClipĪrsClip is a free clipboard manager that gets regular updates. It’s been around for a long time and has a huge number of useful features. This includes macros, cloud syncing, multiple file type support, clipboard editing, etc. You can either bring up the popup menu using the Ctrl + Shift + Z like shown below or use the Clipboard Bar as shown above for managing your clips.ĪrsClip is also highly customizable and configurable. ![]() Just right-click on the tray icon and choose Configure. Here you can control all the settings related to the popup, to how the clipboard is managed, etc. Overall, I recommend this program over ClipX below because it’s constantly being updated whereas ClipX is a decade old.ĬlipX is a tiny program that does the same thing as the other tools, but with fewer features. Unfortunately, it hasn’t been updated since 2008, but works just fine on Windows 7 and Windows 8/10 64-bit. The premise is the same: you copy items normally and then use a shortcut key to access those items.
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