various selection/clipboard mechanisms in X

2001-05-16 Thread Alan Eugene Davis
Greetings to everyone.  

May I ask where I may find a tutorial or explanation about the use of
the mouse under X?  I am puzzled by the variations.  Some programs can
cut and paste into others, while others cannot.  Reading mail in
Sylpheed, I just noticed, I was able to just highlight a URL (left
button drag) and then just click with middle button in Netscape
Location slot.  Then, in another instance when the url was highlighted
by Sylpheed this didn't work.  Presumeably this is because the URL did
not have http://; prefixed to it in the first instance.  

This is not  a problem isolated to Sylpheed, however.  There are three
different selection buffer/clipboard programs, not one of which can do
exactly what I need: xclipboard, xpaste, and xcutsel.  I haven't yet
figured out the difference.  I think xclipboard is the best; but I
cannot print without again copying into one of the others!  (Why can't
I just highlight a paragraph in Netscape and print the highlighted
region?  Emacs rules!)  

Emacs has it's own way of working with the mouse, and interoperability
isn't assured, but it seems to be getting better recently.  

Is there some setup to get all these things talking?

Alan Davis
Marianas High School,

-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  1-670-235-6580
Alan E. Davis,  PMB 30, Box 10006, Saipan, MP 96950-8906, CNMI

 I have steadily endeavored to keep my mind free, so as to give up any
 hypothesis, however much beloved -- and I cannot resist forming one on
 every subject -- as soon as facts are shown to be opposed to it.  
  -- Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

  
 




Re: various selection/clipboard mechanisms in X

2001-05-16 Thread Erik Steffl
  this works with most application (I guess you already know it):

  drag left mouse button to select
  click middle mouse button to copy the selected text to focused window
(field)

  here comes the saviour:

  when it does not work, notably with staroffice, use xcutsel, try to
select, click one of the buttons in xcutsel, try to copy ... it usually
works with one button (there are only two buttons in xcutsel) or another
(depending if you copy from or to staroffice or other non-standard
program)

  this is not much of an explanation but it might help you anyway, I was
able to copy almost everything so far (don't remeber anything I couldn't
copy), it helps a lot if you use X servers under ms windows... or use
vnc... etc...

erik

Alan Eugene Davis wrote:
 
 Greetings to everyone.
 
 May I ask where I may find a tutorial or explanation about the use of
 the mouse under X?  I am puzzled by the variations.  Some programs can
 cut and paste into others, while others cannot.  Reading mail in
 Sylpheed, I just noticed, I was able to just highlight a URL (left
 button drag) and then just click with middle button in Netscape
 Location slot.  Then, in another instance when the url was highlighted
 by Sylpheed this didn't work.  Presumeably this is because the URL did
 not have http://; prefixed to it in the first instance.
 
 This is not  a problem isolated to Sylpheed, however.  There are three
 different selection buffer/clipboard programs, not one of which can do
 exactly what I need: xclipboard, xpaste, and xcutsel.  I haven't yet
 figured out the difference.  I think xclipboard is the best; but I
 cannot print without again copying into one of the others!  (Why can't
 I just highlight a paragraph in Netscape and print the highlighted
 region?  Emacs rules!)
 
 Emacs has it's own way of working with the mouse, and interoperability
 isn't assured, but it seems to be getting better recently.
 
 Is there some setup to get all these things talking?
 
 Alan Davis
 Marianas High School,
 
 --
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]  1-670-235-6580
 Alan E. Davis,  PMB 30, Box 10006, Saipan, MP 96950-8906, CNMI
 
  I have steadily endeavored to keep my mind free, so as to give up any
  hypothesis, however much beloved -- and I cannot resist forming one on
  every subject -- as soon as facts are shown to be opposed to it.
   -- Charles Darwin (1809-1882)