Auto Copy & Paste Command
What about create a command for "copy this and paste it to a certain app"?
For example, with such a command you can ask your PC to do the following automatically :
Copy the selected text on a web page, AND paste it to a notebook file (already opened, of course).
In this case you don't have to:
1. Select some text
2. Press Ctrl+C
3. Switch to your Notebook
4. Press Ctrl+V
5. Switch back to the browser.and do something similar repeatly...
For example, with such a command you can ask your PC to do the following automatically :
Copy the selected text on a web page, AND paste it to a notebook file (already opened, of course).
In this case you don't have to:
1. Select some text
2. Press Ctrl+C
3. Switch to your Notebook
4. Press Ctrl+V
5. Switch back to the browser.and do something similar repeatly...
2
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The company has not planned to implement this.
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But Enso is not a good choice, either.
Using it is not faster than using "Ctrl+C" & "Ctrl+V".
What I am looking for is a press-one-button-and-PC-will-do-a-series-of-steps thing... -
You posted this under the product Ubiquity, which has nothing to do with buttons. Does this have nothing to do with Ubiquity? -
Inappropriate?Well...I am sorry for any misunderstanding...as I am NOT a native English speaker...
Let me try to "describe" my idea with an example:
a) Suppose there is a Ubiquity command named "copy-and-paste-to-notebook".
b) Now I have opened my Firefox browser, watching this page. I have also opened a MS Notebook file, say, named aaa.txt
c) Now I select some text, say, the sentence "How does this make you feel"
d) I "turn on" Ubiquity and type the command --- copy-and-paste-to-notebook
e). In my idea, the PC will now copy the sentence in its memory, and automatically, immediately paste it in the aaa.txt file
f) With "conventional" methods, for e) I need to "Ctrl+C", then switch (by mouse clicking or "Alt+Tab" on keyboard) to the Notebook application, find the cursor, and "Ctrl+V".
7. If there was such a "copy-and-paste-to-notebook" command, efforts mentioned in f) can be saved...by the magic of Ubiquity.
I’m frustrated
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