On Thu, 2003-05-29 at 18:54, Jason Douglas wrote: > This happened to me too today. Is this behaviour by design?
This is the way Unix works. I believe ^X is simply a shortcut for the Unix way of doing things, which is to highlight the text, go to the new window, and use middle mouse to paste. If the window disappears, you no longer have anything highlighted, meaning the copy buffer is empty. ^X/^C/^V are Windows things. There is work being done to make a global clipboard for Gnome. I don't know if it's an official part of Gnome yet. If it is, then Evo would have to use it. Dan > > > On Thu, 2003-05-29 at 20:46, Ben Davis wrote: > > > I was pretty bummed when this happend.. I started an email and > > realized I had replied to the wrong thread, and wanted to reply to a > > different one, so I cut (ctrl-x) my text that I had already typed so I > > could paste it into a different message. Unfortunately when I closed > > the message window it cleared the clipboard and lost my cut text!! Why > > would it do that? that kind of defeats the purpose of having a > > clipboard, doesn't it??? > > > > [image] > [image] > [image] > > Jason Douglas > Web Application Developer > http://gnome.ath.cx/ > http://scopicmedia.com/jasond/ _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution
