CopyQ is an advanced clipboard manager with powerful editing and scripting features.
- CopyQ monitors the system clipboard and saves its content in customized tabs.
- Saved clipboard entries can later be copied and pasted directly into any application.
- Support for Linux, Windows, and OS X 10.15+
- Store text, HTML, images, and any other custom formats
- Quickly browse and filter items in clipboard history
- Sort, create, edit, remove, copy/paste, drag'n'drop items in tabs
- Add notes and tags to items
- System-wide keyboard shortcuts with customizable commands
- Paste items with keyboard shortcuts, from tray, or from main window
- Fully customizable appearance
- Advanced command-line interface and scripting
- Ignore clipboard copied from specified windows or containing specified text
- Support for simple Vim-like editor with keyboard shortcuts
- Many more features
To install CopyQ, use the binary package or the installer provided for your operating system.
For unlisted operating systems, please follow the instructions in Build from Source Code.
On Windows you can use any of the following options to install CopyQ:
Using Scoop:
scoop install copyq
Using Chocolatey:
choco install copyq
On OS X you can use Homebrew to install CopyQ:
brew install --cask copyq
If you encounter an issue where the app crashes with a dialog saying "CopyQ is damaged" or "CopyQ cannot be opened", you may need to run the following commands (for details, see #2652):
xattr -d com.apple.quarantine /Applications/CopyQ.app
codesign --force --deep --sign - /Applications/CopyQ.app
Install copyq
and copyq-plugins
packages.
Install and keep CopyQ always up to date by running the following commands from the terminal (the package from PPA contains all plugins and documentation):
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:hluk/copyq
sudo apt update
sudo apt install copyq
Install copyq
package.
Install copyq
package.
Install Flatpak and com.github.hluk.copyq
from
Flathub.
flatpak install flathub com.github.hluk.copyq
Start CopyQ from the menu or with the following command:
flatpak run com.github.hluk.copyq
To start CopyQ, double-click the program icon or run copyq
.
The list with the clipboard history is accessible by clicking on the system tray icon
or by running copyq toggle
.
Copying text or image to the clipboard will create a new item in the list.
Selected items can be:
- edited (
F2
) - removed (
Delete
) - sorted (
Ctrl+Shift+S
,Ctrl+Shift+R
) - repositioned (with mouse or
Ctrl+Up/Down
) - copied back to the clipboard (
Ctrl+C
) - pasted to the previously active window (
Enter
)
All items will be restored when CopyQ is next started.
To exit CopyQ, select Exit from the tray menu or press Ctrl-Q
in the
CopyQ window.
Read more:
To create custom actions that can be executed from the menu, with keyboard shortcuts, or when the clipboard changes:
- go to the Command dialog (
F6
shortcut) - click the
Add
button, then select a predefined command, or create a new one - optionally change the command details (shortcut, name)
- click
OK
to save the command
One of the very useful predefined commands is "Show/hide main window".
Read more:
CopyQ has a powerful command line and scripting interface.
Note: The main application must be running to be able to issue commands using the command line.
Print help for some useful command line arguments:
copyq --help
copyq --help add
Insert some text in the history:
copyq add -- 'first item' 'second item' 'third item'
Omitting the double-dash (--
) in the command above would mean that slashes
(\
) in arguments will be treated as special characters. For example, \n
will be treated as
the new line character, \t
as tab, \\
as slash, \x
as x
, etc.
Create a single item containing two lines:
copyq add 'first line\nsecond line'
Print the content of the first three items:
copyq read 0 1 2
copyq separator "," read 0 1 2
Show the current clipboard content:
copyq clipboard
copyq clipboard text/html
copyq clipboard \? # lists formats in clipboard
Copy text to the clipboard:
copyq copy "Some Text"
Load file content into the clipboard:
copyq copy - < file.txt
copyq copy text/html < index.html
copyq copy image/jpeg - < image.jpg
Create image items:
copyq write image/gif - < image.gif
copyq write image/svg - < image.svg
Read more:
To build CopyQ from source code, first install the required dependencies:
sudo apt install \
cmake \
extra-cmake-modules \
git \
libqt5svg5 \
libqt5svg5-dev \
libqt5waylandclient5-dev \
libqt5x11extras5-dev \
libwayland-dev \
libxfixes-dev \
libxtst-dev \
qtbase5-private-dev \
qtdeclarative5-dev \
qttools5-dev \
qttools5-dev-tools \
qtwayland5 \
qtwayland5-dev-tools
sudo yum install \
cmake \
extra-cmake-modules \
gcc-c++ \
git \
libXfixes-devel \
libXtst-devel \
qt5-qtbase-devel \
qt5-qtdeclarative-devel \
qt5-qtsvg-devel \
qt5-qttools-devel \
qt5-qtwayland-devel \
qt5-qtx11extras-devel \
wayland-devel \
kf5-knotifications-devel
Change install prefix if needed:
git clone https://github.com/hluk/CopyQ.git
cd CopyQ
cmake .
make
You can now run the built app.
./copyq
You can help translate CopyQ (click the banner below) or help fix issues and implement new features.
Read more: