Oops; let's leave off `-v' from the tar command line, or my nightly
[sgt/utils] / xcopy / xcopy.but
CommitLineData
9acadc2b 1\cfg{man-identity}{xcopy}{1}{2004-08-02}{Simon Tatham}{Simon Tatham}
2\cfg{man-mindepth}{1}
3
8a48d402 4\title Man page for \cw{xcopy}
9acadc2b 5
8a48d402 6\U NAME
9acadc2b 7
8\cw{xcopy} - read and write text to/from an X selection from the
9command line
10
8a48d402 11\U SYNOPSIS
9acadc2b 12
13\c xcopy [ -r ] [ -u | -c ] [ -C ]
14\e bbbbb bb bb bb bb
15
8a48d402 16\U DESCRIPTION
9acadc2b 17
18\cw{xcopy} is a command-line utility for manipulating the X selection.
19
20It has two basic modes. In read mode (\cw{xcopy -r}), it connects to
21your X server, retrieves the contents of the selection as plain
22text, and writes it on standard output. You would then typically
23redirect its output into a file, or pipe it into some other program.
24
25In write mode (just \cw{xcopy}, if \cw{-r} is not specified), it
26will read data from standard input, then connect to your X server
27and place that data in the selection as plain text. So you can pipe
28data into \cw{xcopy}, move to another application, and press Paste.
29
30The X selection model requires the selection-owning client to remain
31connected to the server and hand out its data on request. Therefore,
32\cw{xcopy} in write mode forks off a background process which does
33this. The background process terminates once it is no longer the
34selection owner (i.e. as soon as you select data in another
35application), or if your X session finishes. Normally you can ignore
36its presence, although it might become important to be aware of it
37if (for example) the \cw{xcopy} background process were to be the
38last X client still connected through an SSH tunnel.
39
40\cw{xcopy} currently only handles text data. However, it is capable
41of handling it in the form of plain text, UTF-8, or compound
42(multiple-character-set) text. Use the \cw{-u}, \cw{-c} and \cw{-C}
43options to control this aspect of its behaviour.
44
8a48d402 45\U OPTIONS
9acadc2b 46
47By default (if \cw{-r} is not supplied), \cw{xcopy} operates in
48write mode.
49
50\dt \cw{-r}
51
52\dd Places \cw{xcopy} into read mode.
53
54By default (if neither \cw{-c} nor \cw{-u} is supplied), \cw{xcopy}
55reads and writes the selection using the type \cw{STRING}, which
56means that the input or output data is expected to be encoded in
57ISO-8859-1.
58
59\dt \cw{-u}
60
61\dd In read mode, causes \cw{xcopy} to request the selection using
62the type \cw{UTF8_STRING}, which typically means that the returned
63data will be encoded as UTF-8. In write mode, causes \cw{xcopy} to
64\e{give out} the selection as type \cw{UTF8_STRING}, meaning that
65the data piped in to it is expected to be encoded as UTF-8.
66
67\dt \cw{-c}
68
69\dd Similar to \cw{-u}, but uses the type \cw{COMPOUND_TEXT} rather
70than \cw{UTF8_STRING}. \cw{COMPOUND_TEXT} is a complex
71multi-character-set encoding similar to ISO 2022, and is unlikely to
72be a very useful form in which to pass data to or from non-X
73programs. However, it might occasionally be useful to retrieve a
74compound text selection using \cw{xcopy -r -c}, and later on return
75it to the X selection using \cw{xcopy -c} so it can be pasted back
76into a different application.
77
78In write mode, if \cw{xcopy} is operating in \cw{STRING} mode and a
79pasting application requests the selection as \cw{COMPOUND_TEXT},
80\cw{xcopy} will convert the data automatically. This is normally
81what you want.
82
83\dt \cw{-C}
84
85\dd Suppresses conversion to compound text in write mode. This is
86occasionally useful if you are pasting control characters, since the
87compound text specification forbids any control characters and the
88Xlib conversion functions honour this. If you are (for example)
89trying to paste a sequence of editor commands into a terminal
90window, you might well want to paste a string full of escape
91sequences and control characters, in which case you may need to use
92\cw{-C} to disable conversion to compound text.
93
8a48d402 94\U BUGS
9acadc2b 95
96Occasionally \cw{xcopy -r} completely fails to notice selection data
97owned by another process. I have not yet reproduced this reliably;
98if anyone can, some work with \cw{xmon}(1) would be much
99appreciated...
100
101Automatic conversion between compound text and UTF-8 is not
102currently supported. There are Xlib functions to do it, although
103they don't appear to work very well (missing out many characters
104which they could have converted).
da0f8522 105
8a48d402 106\U LICENCE
da0f8522 107
108\cw{xcopy} is free software, distributed under the MIT licence. Type
109\cw{xcopy --licence} to see the full licence text.