YANK(1) | General Commands Manual | YANK(1) |
yank
— yank
terminal output to clipboard
yank |
[-lx | -v ]
[-d delim]
[-g pattern
[-i ]] [--
command [argument ...]] |
Read input from stdin and display a
selection interface that allows a field to be selected and copied to the
clipboard. Fields are either recognized by a regular expression using the
-g
option or by splitting the input on a delimiter
sequence using the -d
option, see
DELIMITERS.
Using the arrow keys will move the selected field, see COMMANDS. Pressing the return key will invoke command and write the selected field to its stdin. The command defaults to xsel(1x) but could be anything that accepts input on stdin, see EXAMPLES.
The options are as follows:
-d
delim-g
pattern-i
-l
-v
-x
--
command
[argument ...]Ctrl-A
|
g
Ctrl-C
|
Ctrl-D
Ctrl-E
| G
Ctrl-P
/Ctrl-N
|
Left
/Right
|
h
/l
Up
/Down
|
j
/k
Enter
If the -d
and -g
options are omitted the following characters are recognized as delimiters by
default:
If the -d
option is present space is not
recognized as a delimiter.
Yank an environment variable key or value:
$ env | yank -d =
Yank a field from a CSV file:
$ yank -d \",
<file.csv
Yank a whole line using the -l
option:
$ make 2>&1 | yank
-l
If stdout is not a terminal the selected field will be written to stdout and exit without invoking the yank command. Kill the selected PID:
$ ps ux | yank -g [0-9]+ | xargs
kill
Yank the selected field to the clipboard as opposed of the default primary clipboard:
$ yank -- xsel -b
The yank
utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
Anton Lindqvist <anton@basename.se>
Recognizing fields enclosed in brackets requires ‘]’
to be present before ‘[’ in the argument given to the
-d
option, see re_format(7).
July 10, 2015 | Debian |