El día sábado, diciembre 09, 2017 a las 01:17:31p. m. -0700, Stephen Dowdy escribió: > There's a lot of "cut/paste" mechanisms in play. > > X11 has a Primary and Secondary buffer, but there's also a Clipboard. > selecting text via mouse in something like xterm puts that text into the Primary buffer. > Using CTRL-C/V uses the Clipboard. (this is all generalizations). > > You can use a tool like 'xsel' or 'xclip' to manipulate all three of those buffers: > To see what's in each buffer: > > for buf in primary secondary clipboard; do printf "\n[${buf}]\n"; xsel -o --${buf} ; done; printf "\n" For "my" xsel (xsel 0.04 23072002) the syntax was: for buf in PRIMARY SECONDARY CLIPBOARD; do printf "\n[${buf}]\n"; xsel -p -s ${buf} ; done; printf "\n" Thanks anyway for this pointer; matthias -- Matthias Apitz, ✉ guru@xxxxxxxxxxx, ⌂ http://www.unixarea.de/ 📱 +49-176-38902045 Public GnuPG key: http://www.unixarea.de/key.pub