Copy Text On Screen

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Maximina

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Jul 18, 2024, 11:04:18 PM7/18/24
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In most programs, you would select text and press Ctrl + C to copy it. Pasting text would be done by pressing Ctrl + V. In the terminal emulator program, Ctrl + C has a special meaning, it interrupts (stops) programs by default.

Your terminal emulator program may have other shortcuts defined. For example, Konsole and Gnome Terminal uses Ctrl + Shift + C for copying the selected text. Alternatively, select text and copy it by using the Copy option in the Edit menu or the context menu.

copy text on screen


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Now, when you select something in screen copy/scrollback mode, and write paste buffer to a file with C-a >, you can move to the browser and paste the content of the clipboard as usual (for example with Ctrl-V).

For this to work the variable DISPLAY must be correctly set, and you must have access to the X server. This is not a problem when you are on a terminal running on the same X server, but if you run screen in a virtual terminal, e.g. tty1, then you may need to run xhost + on the X side, and export DISPLAY=:0 or similar on the terminal, before starting screen.

The text extractor will allow you to extract text from any image. You may upload an image or document (.pdf) and the tool will pull text from the image. Once extracted, you can copy to your clipboard with one click.

The technology works by analyzing objects within an image and generating a set of tags returned from a machine learning system. Based on a confidence score, the tags with the highest likelihood of accuracy will be applied to the image. When used within a DAM software like Brandfolder, metadata and auto-tagging provide a convenient method to search by. You can read more about metadata auto tagging in our blog.

The Workbench color palette generator extracts a series of HEX colors from an image upon upload. It counts every pixel and its color, and generates a palette of up to 6 HEX codes of the most recurring colors.

For example, an image may include metadata that describes how large the picture is, the color depth, the image resolution, the creation date, and other data. A text document's metadata may include information about length of document, the author, publish date, and a short summary of the document.

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I want to yank text with a command to vim and have it end up in screen's clipboard where it can be pasted to a different application via ^A] later. vim needs to do the copying (not screen's copy mode) because I have more text than will fit on screen at one time.

Answers to other questions have approached this issue, but they mostly rely on using vim's interfaces + and * to the X clipboard, which is not available to applications started remotely or not in the presence of an X session to begin with. I'm working through puTTY, but that's incidental as I just want to transfer between screens and not [necessarily] out to local.

I want to copy a text part from any website using the conventional mouse left click drag and then use keyboard ctrl+c to copy and ctrl+v to put the output in a notepad file. The whole should be done without using scrape method. Is it possible?

I'd like to essentially yank text y'k and mk or yy in one instance of vim in one screen tab and paste it into another instance of vim in a different screen tab without having to select the text with my mouse and ctrl+c/ctrl+v.

To make it more clear, the commands I wrote above assume that you marked some text visually. To copy the current line you can for example do: V"*y and then you can paste in every application with the middle mouse button. Or you can use V"+y and paste with ctrl-v or whatever shortcut you have configured to paste.

In addition to what Marco wrote, you can add the following to your vimrc to use the "* or "+ register in parallel with the unnamed register so that, for example, text yanked with yy will automatically go to the "* or "+ register.

Copy - Text On Screen is an innovative application designed to streamline the process of extracting text directly from your mobile screen. Leveraging Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology, the app boasts a 99%+ accuracy rate, enabling users to effortlessly capture text from any part of the screen or even extract words from images with a simple share to the app.

One of the stellar advantages of the app is its extensive language support, offering OCR in 92 languages, thereby catering to a global user base. Whether it's capturing a quick snippet from a social media post or grabbing a URL, email, or phone number without manual typing, this tool offers unparalleled convenience. It also seamlessly translates text into over 100 languages, making it incredibly useful for multilingual users.

The application is not just useful for English texts but also excels with Latin-based and other global languages, ensuring that no matter where users are or what text they encounter, it will be accessible and usable in a few simple taps. This makes the game a must-have addition to one's toolkit for effortless text extraction and translation on the go.

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Why? Several reasons. One important one is for review / admin purposes. Each screen is given a unique ID number that displays on the a screen, and when reviewers / users find a bug, typo, etc., they would reference that page via this code.

I've accomplished this in other eLearning authoring systems by creating (manually or dynamically) a selectable text field on each screen that the user can copy the ID from. This is preferential to the user manually typing it out as that is time-consuming and copy/pasting is less prone to error.

I don't believe there is a way to copy text out of a published Storyline course. I know a few other users have mentioned using a site such as as it allows SMEs and other reviewers to add content and keep it all in one place. You may want to look into that for your review purposes.

This will export all the text to a word document (each text block is automatically given a unique ID). You can edit the text to fix any typos etc., and then use the Translation>Import function to load the text back into Storyline. It works like a charm as long as you don't edit the IDs themselves.

Thank you for sharing this with us! I can see how copying text would be necessary for this type of interaction. We don't currently offer a way to copy text from a Storyline 360 course unless it's in an entry field.

I seem to keep going down this rabbit hole with my friend Google, but not getting anywhere concrete. The course that I'm working on has all the text content on the slide, which is 99% the same as the TTS audio, and also the same as what's in the Notes tab, which is available to the learner.

We're trying to figure out if we still need closed captioning for the course because it's just another copy of visual text content that already exists in two places. There are very rare instances where the audio doesn't perfectly match what's on the slide and the differences are very minor. Has anyone gone down this path before and figured out what was actually required?

We're considering having an accessibility consultant come in to give us advice, but it would be a while before that happens. The closed captioning is so time consuming that it would be nice to know if it wasn't required. If anyone has any resources to share where they've found a documented answer, I would greatly appreciate it!

Hi Lindsay, I would argue that the text on screen is acting as closed captions. Because the audio does not need to be hear at a particular time in sync with an event, the slide text is adequate and most likely a better experience as it can be read at the users own pace, much like an audio transcript.

The only thing to look out for though is, can a user read the text content quicker than the audio track is played? Once they have finished reading, do they then have to wait for the audio track to complete in order for a Next button to be enabled, or for content to appear on the slide? This can create periods of silence for some users where they have finished reading the content on page, and are waiting for an event (that they are unaware of) to happen on the slide.

If you're using the Windows OS and have a Windows keyboard, you can use the Windows+S key combo to copy a selection off the screen. That will display a window asking where you'd like to copy it to. From there, you can use CTRL+V, or right-click and paste.

I'm creating an expandable decision tree in the form of a flow chart. This will be used by agents during actual contacts. I want to direct agents down the correct path when taking contacts on a certain big call driver. It's basically one slide with lots of layers.

Since some contacts are via chat, one feature I wanted to include was to have the option of copying what they should tell the customer at that point. Then they could paste into the chat interface they are using with their customer. This would make it easier for agents and allow for consistent messaging at key points int he troubleshooting process.

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