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authorHavoc Pennington <hp@redhat.com>2000-12-01 05:29:38 +0000
committerHavoc Pennington <hp@redhat.com>2000-12-01 05:29:38 +0000
commit417407e614bc519725822a10196c45c8c4f2d8e3 (patch)
tree40637dbc61f82d6e36aafacb564495378e22872d /clipboard
downloadxdg-specs-417407e614bc519725822a10196c45c8c4f2d8e3.tar.xz
clipboards stuff
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+Historically, X clients have not handled cut-and-paste in a consistent
+way, leading users to believe that X doesn't even have a working
+clipboard. This isn't really accurate; there is a conventional
+behavior, somewhat standardized in the ICCCM. But many apps don't
+follow the conventional behavior.
+
+X has a thing called "selections" which are just clipboards,
+essentially (implemented with an asynchronous protocol so you don't
+actually copy data to them). There are three standard selections
+defined in the ICCCM: PRIMARY, SECONDARY, and CLIPBOARD.
+
+The ICCCM defines these as follows:
+
+ "The selection named by the atom PRIMARY is used for all com-
+ mands that take only a single argument and is the principal
+ means of communication between clients that use the selec-
+ tion mechanism.
+
+ The selection named by the atom SECONDARY is used:
+
+ o As the second argument to commands taking two arguments
+ (for example, "exchange primary and secondary selec-
+ tions")
+
+ o As a means of obtaining data when there is a primary
+ selection and the user does not want to disturb it
+
+ The selection named by the atom CLIPBOARD is used to hold
+ data that is being transferred between clients, that is,
+ data that usually is being cut and then pasted or copied and
+ then pasted."
+
+In addition, the ICCCM has a thing called "cut buffers" which most
+clients no longer support.
+
+There are two historical interpretations of the ICCCM:
+
+ a) use PRIMARY for mouse selection, middle mouse button paste, and
+ explicit cut/copy/paste menu items (Qt 2, GNU Emacs 20)
+ b) use CLIPBOARD for the Windows-style cut/copy/paste menu items;
+ use PRIMARY for the currently-selected text, even if it isn't
+ explicitly copied, and for middle-mouse-click (Netscape, Mozilla,
+ XEmacs, some GTK+ apps)
+
+No one ever does anything interesting with SECONDARY as far as I can
+tell.
+
+The current consensus is that interpretation b) is correct. Qt 3 and
+GNU Emacs 21 will use interpretation b), changing the behavior of
+previous versions.
+
+The correct behavior can be summarized as follows: CLIPBOARD works
+just like the clipboard on Mac or Windows; it only changes on explicit
+cut/copy. PRIMARY is an "easter egg" for expert users, regular users
+can just ignore it; it's normally pastable only via
+middle-mouse-click.
+
+The rationale for this behavior is mostly that behavior a) has a lot
+of problems, namely:
+
+ - inconsistent with Mac/Windows
+ - confusingly, selecting anything overwrites the clipboard
+ - not efficient with a tool such as xclipboard
+ - you should be able to select text, then paste the clipboard
+ over it, but that doesn't work if the selection and
+ clipboard are the same
+ - the Copy menu item is useless and does nothing,
+ which is confusing
+ - if you think of PRIMARY as the current selection,
+ Cut doesn't make any sense since the selection simultaneously
+ disappears and becomes the current selection
+
+Application authors should follow the following guidelines to get
+correct behavior:
+
+ - selecting but with no explicit copy should only set PRIMARY,
+ never CLIPBOARD
+
+ - middle mouse button should paste PRIMARY, never CLIPBOARD
+
+ - explicit cut/copy commands (i.e. menu items, toolbar buttons)
+ should always set CLIPBOARD to the currently-selected data (i.e.
+ conceptually copy PRIMARY to CLIPBOARD)
+
+ - explicit paste commands should paste CLIPBOARD, not PRIMARY
+
+ - possibly contradicting the ICCCM, clients don't need to support
+ SECONDARY, though if anyone can figure out what it's good
+ for they should feel free to use it for that
+
+ - cut buffers are evil; they only support ASCII, they don't
+ work with many clients, and they require data to be
+ copied to the X server. Therefore clients should avoid
+ using cut buffers and use only selections.
+
+Apps that follow these guidelines give users a simple mental model to
+understand what's going on. PRIMARY is the current selection. Middle
+button pastes the current selection. CLIPBOARD is just like on
+Mac/Windows. You don't have to know about PRIMARY if you're a newbie.
+
+I don't think there's a sane mental model if we collapse everything
+into PRIMARY and ignore clipboard, see rationale above.
+
+A remaining somewhat odd thing about X selections is that exiting the
+app you did a cut/copy from removes the cut/copied data from the
+clipboard, since the selection protocol is asynchronous and requires
+the source app to provide the data at paste time. The solution here
+would be a standardized protocol for a "clipboard daemon" so that apps
+could hand off their data to a daemon when they exit.