![]() ![]() There is, however, a deeper layer to Copied’s functionality that warrants the app’s “desktop-class” status: text transformation through merge scripts and templates.Ĭopied comes with a template system that lets you programmatically alter text through built-in plain text variables as well as JavaScript. The Copied I’ve described so far is a versatile clipboard manager that turns the platform disadvantage of iOS into a series of integrations to simplify the saving of text and images. I haven’t been an assiduous user of custom keyboards, but I want to turn Copied’s keyboard into a habit. With its custom keyboard, Copied becomes part of the app you’re using: a grid of clippings can appear alongside a document you’re writing or iMessage you’re composing, enabling you to insert several bits of text or images in a row just by tapping on thumbnails in the bottom half of the screen. Normally, desktop clipboard managers would appear as floating popups with a list of previously copied items on top of the app you’re using, or they would require a sequence of keyboard shortcuts to navigate their item history. When Copied is in Split View, a ‘Save Universal Clipboard’ setting saves anything that is copied from another app.A custom keyboard to save text from any app that has a text field. ![]() A widget to save the current clipboard contents.A second action extension that brings up a clipper UI to confirm and transform content before clipping it.A headless (no UI) action extension that saves content directly into Copied.There are five ways you can save text and images into Copied from any iPad app: It’s built for a platform where optimal efficiency doesn’t lie in background monitoring and invisible execution, but in native integrations with apps and the OS. I could get work done without Copied, but I’d be noticeably slower.Ĭopied is, in many ways, an iOS-first clipboard manager. I covered Kevin Chang’s app on multiple occasions before, and it is an essential addition to my writing workflow whenever I’m dealing with a longform document that requires shuffling portions of text between apps. If you’re looking for a standalone clipboard manager to hold bits of text (and images) to sync them across devices with iCloud (something most Mac clipboard apps won’t do), I recommend Copied. JOIN FOR $50 PER YEAR Clipboard Manager: Copied You can find out more about Club MacStories here, or subscribe directly below. One of MacStories Weekly’s regular sections is the Workflow Corner – a weekly assortment of iPad workflows, iOS automation tips, and tutorials curated by Federico and the MacStories team.Īs a new member, you’ll also receive complete access to our back catalogue of over 80 newsletters starting from September 2015. ![]() Starting at $5/month, Club MacStories includes MacStories Weekly – a newsletter delivered every Friday with a focus on iOS productivity and showcasing new and interesting iOS apps. With a Club MacStories subscription, you’ll gain access to weekly iPad workflows, iOS app recommendations, and other exclusive extras. Get More iOS Productivity Tips and Workflows However, once we accept the intrinsic differences between the Mac and iPad and if we look at the problem from a different perspective, there’s plenty we can do – either with apps or automation – to go beyond Apple’s modest clipboard offerings on iOS.Īfter years of testing iPad clipboard managers and automation/scripting strategies, this is what I’ve come up with. With these limitations, it’s no surprise that clipboard managers aren’t a flourishing category on the iPad App Store. An app would have to at least be currently in use via Split View to listen for clipboard changes, but, even in that case, it would have to be active to receive external keyboard commands. Third-party iOS apps can’t constantly monitor changes to the system clipboard in the background similarly, it isn’t possible for an iPad app to register as the handler of a keyboard shortcut at a system-wide level. One of the common challenges involving a switch from macOS to an iPad is the lack of desktop-like clipboard managers on iOS.īy nature of the platform 1 and technical restrictions imposed by Apple, apps like Pastebot or Alfred wouldn’t be able to adapt their Mac capabilities to the iPad.
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