Mercurial > cgi-bin > hgweb.cgi > ClipMan
comparison README.txt @ 54:a9d5c94a177c
Add README file.
author | David Barts <n5jrn@me.com> |
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date | Tue, 13 Apr 2021 10:33:33 -0700 |
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1 This is a simple, portable clipboard manager written in Kotlin. It | |
2 should run on all three of {Linux, Macintosh, Windows}. | |
3 | |
4 Although in most respects pretty basic, it does support one feature that | |
5 I wish most clipboard managers had (but to my knowledge which none but | |
6 this one have): the ability to coerce a text from one font family to | |
7 another. By this I mean, suppose you have a text passage in 10 point | |
8 Times Roman. The text uses bold and italics for emphasis. You wish to | |
9 paste into a document as 12 point Helvetica. | |
10 | |
11 For the vast majority of document-editing programs, you have two | |
12 choices, both of them bad: | |
13 1. Paste the text preserving existing formatting, i.e. as 10 point Times | |
14 Roman, then plod through it converting the plain text parts to 12 | |
15 point Helvetica plain, the italics to 12 point Helvetica oblique, and | |
16 the bold to 12 point Helvetica bold. | |
17 2. As above, but paste as plain text, losing all formatting, then put | |
18 the relevant formatting back. | |
19 | |
20 Just *try* getting everything correct on the first try, I dare you. Yet | |
21 all the emphasis is there in the original text; it shouldn’t be *that* | |
22 hard to use it to generate a comparable text in a new font family. Yet | |
23 no such option exists! | |
24 | |
25 ClipMan has such an option. Copy the source text into the clipboard, | |
26 choose “Coerce…” and select 12-point Helvetica as the proportional font | |
27 to coerce to. Bam! Done! | |
28 | |
29 A somewhat obscure operation, perhaps, and even I don’t use it every | |
30 day. But when I need it, it is *very* convenient to have it. |