On 2009-09-03, Patrick Gen-Paul <pgenp...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Gary Johnson wrote:
> 
> [..]
> 
> >That's true, and I use it frequently, but it will only copy and
> >paste among windows running in that terminal.  You can't, for
> >example, use it to copy from Firefox and paste into mutt.
> 
> But in this instance, you still have to use the mouse to select what you 
> paste to the X clipboard?
> 
> Which is the part that I really find inconvenient.
> 
> Once you've managed to select what you really wanted, copying it to a 
> terminal is only a middle-click away.
> 
> Since I use ELinks for 99% of my browsing, this is rarely an issue for 
> me but I'll keep your tip in mind.

After Derek's comment I re-read your post and see now that I
misunderstood your situation.  You're right:  once you've got your
hand on the mouse, you might as well use it for both copying and
pasting.

> Is their anyway I could copy something mutt+vim to the clipboard and 
> retrieve it in Seamonkey via a Ctrl-V for instance?

For vim, it depends on your terminal and on the way vim was built
and configured, but you can usually access the clipboard from vim
via the + and/or * registers.  For example,

    "+yiw

will yank the word under the cursor to the clipboard.  See

    :help x11-selection

for more on this.

There is no way that I know of to do this from mutt.  However, there
is a command-line interface to screen, so you might be able to
transfer the contents of screen's copy buffer to the X clipboard
(actually the selection or cut buffer) by using a mutt macro calling
screen and xclip.  I've never looked into doing that, though.

Regards,
Gary


Reply via email to