How do I read text from the clipboard?

How do I read text from the (windows) clipboard with python?

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

You can use the module called win32clipboard, which is part of pywin32.

Here is an example that first sets the clipboard data then gets it:

import win32clipboard

# set clipboard data
win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
win32clipboard.EmptyClipboard()
win32clipboard.SetClipboardText('testing 123')
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()

# get clipboard data
win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
data = win32clipboard.GetClipboardData()
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()
print data

An important reminder from the documentation:

When the window has finished examining or changing the clipboard,
close the clipboard by calling CloseClipboard. This enables other
windows to access the clipboard. Do not place an object on the
clipboard after calling CloseClipboard.

Method 2

you can easily get this done through the built-in module Tkinter which is basically a GUI library. This code creates a blank widget to get the clipboard content from OS.

from tkinter import Tk  # Python 3
#from Tkinter import Tk # for Python 2.x
Tk().clipboard_get()

Method 3

I found pyperclip to be the easiest way to get access to the clipboard from python:

  1. Install pyperclip:
    pip install pyperclip
  2. Usage:
import pyperclip
    
s = pyperclip.paste()
pyperclip.copy(s)
    
# the type of s is string

With supports Windows, Linux and Mac, and seems to work with non-ASCII characters, too.
Tested characters include ±°©©αβγθΔΨΦåäö

Method 4

I’ve seen many suggestions to use the win32 module, but Tkinter provides the shortest and easiest method I’ve seen, as in this post: How do I copy a string to the clipboard on Windows using Python?

Plus, Tkinter is in the python standard library.

Method 5

If you don’t want to install extra packages, ctypes can get the job done as well.

import ctypes

CF_TEXT = 1

kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32
kernel32.GlobalLock.argtypes = [ctypes.c_void_p]
kernel32.GlobalLock.restype = ctypes.c_void_p
kernel32.GlobalUnlock.argtypes = [ctypes.c_void_p]
user32 = ctypes.windll.user32
user32.GetClipboardData.restype = ctypes.c_void_p

def get_clipboard_text():
    user32.OpenClipboard(0)
    try:
        if user32.IsClipboardFormatAvailable(CF_TEXT):
            data = user32.GetClipboardData(CF_TEXT)
            data_locked = kernel32.GlobalLock(data)
            text = ctypes.c_char_p(data_locked)
            value = text.value
            kernel32.GlobalUnlock(data_locked)
            return value
    finally:
        user32.CloseClipboard()

print(get_clipboard_text())

Method 6

The most upvoted answer above is weird in a way that it simply clears the Clipboard and then gets the content (which is then empty). One could clear the clipboard to be sure that some clipboard content type like “formated text” does not “cover” your plain text content you want to save in the clipboard.

The following piece of code replaces all newlines in the clipboard by spaces, then removes all double spaces and finally saves the content back to the clipboard:

import win32clipboard

win32clipboard.OpenClipboard()
c = win32clipboard.GetClipboardData()
win32clipboard.EmptyClipboard()
c = c.replace('n', ' ')
c = c.replace('r', ' ')
while c.find('  ') != -1:
    c = c.replace('  ', ' ')
win32clipboard.SetClipboardText(c)
win32clipboard.CloseClipboard()

Method 7

The python standard library does it…

try:
    # Python3
    import tkinter as tk
except ImportError:
    # Python2
    import Tkinter as tk

def getClipboardText():
    root = tk.Tk()
    # keep the window from showing
    root.withdraw()
    return root.clipboard_get()

Method 8

For my console program the answers with tkinter above did not quite work for me because the .destroy() always gave an error,:

can’t invoke “event” command: application has been destroyed while executing…

or when using .withdraw() the console window did not get the focus back.

To solve this you also have to call .update() before the .destroy(). Example:

# Python 3
import tkinter

r = tkinter.Tk()
text = r.clipboard_get()
r.withdraw()
r.update()
r.destroy()

The r.withdraw() prevents the frame from showing for a milisecond, and then it will be destroyed giving the focus back to the console.

Method 9

Use Pythons library Clipboard

Its simply used like this:

import clipboard
clipboard.copy("this text is now in the clipboard")
print clipboard.paste()

Method 10

Try win32clipboard from the win32all package (that’s probably installed if you’re on ActiveState Python).

See sample here: http://code.activestate.com/recipes/474121/

Method 11

A not very direct trick:

Use pyautogui hotkey:

Import pyautogui
pyautogui.hotkey('ctrl', 'v')

Therefore, you can paste the clipboard data as you like.

Method 12

After whole 12 years, I have a solution and you can use it without installing any package.

from tkinter import Tk, TclError
from time import sleep

while True:
    try:
        clipboard = Tk().clipboard_get()
        print(clipboard)
        sleep(5)
    except TclError:
        print("Clipboard is empty.")
        sleep(5)

Method 13

For users of Anaconda: distributions don’t come with pyperclip, but they do come with pandas which redistributes pyperclip:

>>> from pandas.io.clipboard import clipboard_get, clipboard_set
>>> clipboard_get()
'from pandas.io.clipboard import clipboard_get, clipboard_set'
>>> clipboard_set("Hello clipboard!")
>>> clipboard_get()
'Hello clipboard!'

I find this easier to use than pywin32 (which is also included in distributions).

Method 14

import pandas as pd
df = pd.read_clipboard()

Method 15

Why not try calling powershell?

import subprocess

def getClipboard():
    ret = subprocess.getoutput("powershell.exe -Command Get-Clipboard")
    return ret


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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