clipboard
Cross platform (macOS/Linux/Windows/BSD/Android/iOS) clipboard package in Go
import "golang.design/x/clipboard"
Features
- Cross platform supports: macOS, Linux (X11 and Wayland), Windows, BSD (X11), iOS, and Android
- Cgo-free on desktop (macOS, Linux, Windows, BSD) — no C toolchain at build time, no
libX11/libwaylandat runtime - Copy/paste UTF-8 text
- Copy/paste PNG-encoded images (Desktop-only);
Writealso accepts other encodings when their decoder is registered - Register and copy/paste custom MIME-typed formats (Desktop-only, raw passthrough)
- Watch the clipboard for changes (event-driven on Wayland)
- Discover what's on the clipboard with
Formats()/Format.MIME(Desktop-only) - Command
gclipas a demo application - Mobile app
gclip-guias a demo application
API Usage
Package clipboard provides cross platform clipboard access and supports macOS/Linux/Windows/BSD/Android/iOS platform. Before interacting with the clipboard, one must call Init to assert if it is possible to use this package:
// Init returns an error if the package is not ready for use.
err := clipboard.Init()
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
The most common operations are Read and Write. To use them:
// write/read text format data of the clipboard, and
// the byte buffer regarding the text are UTF8 encoded.
clipboard.Write(clipboard.FmtText, []byte("text data"))
clipboard.Read(clipboard.FmtText)
// write/read image format data of the clipboard, and
// the byte buffer regarding the image are PNG encoded.
clipboard.Write(clipboard.FmtImage, []byte("image data"))
clipboard.Read(clipboard.FmtImage)
Note that the clipboard serves images as PNG (it serves the alpha-blending
purpose used by other graphical software), so Read(FmtImage) always returns
PNG. Write(FmtImage, ...) accepts PNG directly and will also normalize other
encodings to PNG when their decoder is registered — blank-import the decoder you
need (e.g. import _ "image/jpeg" or import _ "golang.org/x/image/webp"); no
decoder is a mandatory dependency of this package. If you need to put raw,
unconverted bytes on the clipboard, register a custom format instead (see above).
In addition, clipboard.Write returns a channel that can receive an
empty struct as a signal, which indicates the corresponding write call
to the clipboard is outdated, meaning the clipboard has been overwritten
by others and the previously written data is lost. For instance:
changed := clipboard.Write(clipboard.FmtText, []byte("text data"))
select {
case <-changed:
println(`"text data" is no longer available from clipboard.`)
}
You can ignore the returning channel if you don't need this type of notification. Furthermore, when you need more than just knowing whether clipboard data is changed, use the watcher API:
ch := clipboard.Watch(context.TODO(), clipboard.FmtText)
for data := range ch {
// print out clipboard data whenever it is changed
println(string(data.Bytes))
}
Watch is variadic and tags each value with the format it was detected
in, so a single call can observe more than one format at once (pass no
format to watch all supported ones):
ch := clipboard.Watch(context.TODO())
for data := range ch {
switch data.Format {
case clipboard.FmtText:
println("text:", string(data.Bytes))
case clipboard.FmtImage:
println("image bytes:", len(data.Bytes))
}
}
Beyond the built-in FmtText and FmtImage, you can register a custom
format by its MIME type and use the returned token with Read, Write,
and Watch. Custom formats are raw passthrough: the exact bytes are
moved to and from the clipboard under that MIME type with no encoding or
conversion (unlike FmtImage, which transcodes PNG). Register is
idempotent and safe to call before Init:
html := clipboard.Register("text/html")
clipboard.Write(html, []byte("<b>hi</b>"))
b := clipboard.Read(html)
// Or decode into a typed value with ReadAs:
doc, err := clipboard.ReadAs(html, func(b []byte) (*Node, error) {
return parseHTML(b)
})
Custom-format support is per platform:
- macOS, Windows, Linux/X11, BSD/X11: full read/write/watch round-trip.
- Linux/Wayland (data-control): read/write interoperate with other apps; a process does not observe its own just-set custom selection (a data-control limitation).
- iOS, Android, and CGO-disabled builds:
Registerworks, butReadreturnsnilandWriteis a no-op for custom formats — they degrade gracefully like the rest of the API.
To discover what is currently on the clipboard, use Formats. It returns the
available formats (registering any custom MIME types it finds on demand), and
Format.MIME reports a token's identity:
for _, f := range clipboard.Formats() {
switch f {
case clipboard.FmtText:
println("text")
case clipboard.FmtImage:
println("image")
default:
println("custom:", f.MIME()) // e.g. text/html, application/pdf
data := clipboard.Read(f)
_ = data
}
}
Formats discovers types on the desktop backends (macOS, Windows, Linux/X11,
BSD/X11, and Linux/Wayland); on iOS, Android, and CGO-disabled builds it returns
an empty slice.
Demos
- A command line tool
gclipfor command line clipboard accesses, see document here. - A GUI application
gclip-guifor functionality verifications on mobile systems, see a document here.
Command Usage
gclip command offers the ability to interact with the system clipboard
from the shell. To install:
$ go install golang.design/x/clipboard/cmd/gclip@latest
$ gclip
gclip is a command that provides clipboard interaction.
usage: gclip [-copy|-paste] [-f <file>]
options:
-copy
copy data to clipboard
-f string
source or destination to a given file path
-paste
paste data from clipboard
examples:
gclip -paste paste from clipboard and prints the content
gclip -paste -f x.txt paste from clipboard and save as text to x.txt
gclip -paste -f x.png paste from clipboard and save as image to x.png
cat x.txt | gclip -copy copy content from x.txt to clipboard
gclip -copy -f x.txt copy content from x.txt to clipboard
gclip -copy -f x.png copy x.png as image data to clipboard
If -copy is used, the command will exit when the data is no longer
available from the clipboard. You can always send the command to the
background using a shell & operator, for example:
$ cat x.txt | gclip -copy &
Platform Specific Details
This package spent efforts to provide cross platform abstraction regarding accessing system clipboards, but here are a few details you might need to know.
Dependency
- macOS: no Cgo, no build dependency
- Linux: no Cgo, no build dependency. The X11 backend speaks the X11 wire
protocol directly over the display socket (no
libX11), and the Wayland backend speaks the Wayland protocol directly (nolibwayland); a running X server or Wayland compositor is required at runtime, but no dev package. Wayland is supported natively on compositors that expose a data-control manager (ext-data-control-v1, e.g. GNOME ≥ 49, KWin, orzwlr_data_control_manager_v1on wlroots compositors such as Sway and Hyprland). WhenWAYLAND_DISPLAYis set and such a manager is present, the Wayland backend is used automatically; otherwise the package falls back to X11 (via XWayland under Wayland). Older compositors without data-control keep working through XWayland. - FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD: no Cgo, no build dependency. They share Linux's
pure-Go X11 backend (no
libX11); a running X server is required at runtime. FreeBSD and OpenBSD are verified to build in CI; NetBSD is best-effort and untested. - Windows: no Cgo, no dependency
- iOS/Android: collaborate with
gomobile
Caveats
- Linux/X11 clipboard ownership. On X11 the process that writes to
the clipboard owns the selection and serves its content to other
applications on demand. Once the writing process exits, the data is
gone — unless a clipboard manager is running to take over ownership.
In practice plain text is often retained because most clipboard
managers cache it, while larger image data is usually dropped. To keep
written data available after your program exits, keep the process
running (the channel returned by
Writereports when the data is no longer needed) or rely on a clipboard manager. - Linux/X11 selection. Only the
CLIPBOARDselection (Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V) is accessed; thePRIMARYselection (middle-click paste) is not supported. - Image format.
Read(FmtImage)always returns PNG.Write(FmtImage, ...)accepts PNG and normalizes other encodings to PNG when the matching decoder is registered (blank-import it, e.g._ "image/jpeg"). Use a custom format (Register) for raw, unconverted bytes. - Wayland. The native Wayland backend uses the data-control protocol,
which works without keyboard focus. Compositors that do not implement
ext-data-control-v1orzwlr_data_control_manager_v1(e.g. GNOME before 49) are not supported natively; the package falls back to X11 via XWayland there. ThePRIMARYselection is not exposed on Wayland either.
Screenshot
In general, when you need test your implementation regarding images, There are system level shortcuts to put screenshot image into your system clipboard:
- On macOS, use
Ctrl+Shift+Cmd+4 - On Linux/Ubuntu, use
Ctrl+Shift+PrintScreen - On Windows, use
Shift+Win+s
The built-in formats are UTF-8 encoded plain text (FmtText) and PNG encoded
images (FmtImage). Arbitrary types can be exchanged as custom MIME formats via
Register (raw passthrough). On mobile (iOS/Android) only text is supported.
Who is using this package?
The main purpose of building this package is to support the midgard project, which offers clipboard-based features like universal clipboard service that syncs clipboard content across multiple systems, allocating public accessible for clipboard content, etc.
To know more projects, check our wiki page.
License
MIT | © 2021 The golang.design Initiative Authors, written by Changkun Ou.
