Simple module exposing copy
function that will try to use execCommand with fallback to IE-specific clipboardData
interface and finally, resort to usual prompt
with proper text content and message.
import copy from 'copy-to-clipboard';
copy('Text');
// Copy with options
copy('Text', {
debug: true,
message: 'Press #{key} to copy',
});
copy(text: string, options: object): boolean
— tries to copy text to clipboard. Returns true
if no additional keystrokes were required from user (so, execCommand
, IE's clipboardData
worked) or false
.
Value | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|
options.debug | false | Boolean . Optional. Enable output to console. |
options.message | Copy to clipboard: #{key} , Enter |
String . Optional. Prompt message. * |
*
all occurrences of #{key}
are replaced with ⌘+C
for macOS/iOS users, and Ctrl+C
otherwise.
Works everywhere where prompt
* is available. Works best (i.e. without additional keystrokes) in Chrome, FF, Safari 10+, and, supposedly, IE/Edge.
Note: does not work on some older iOS devices.
*
– even though Safari 8 has prompt
, you cannot specify prefilled content for prompt modal – thus it doesn't work as expected.
- Can be used as npm package and then leveraged using commonjs bundler/loader:
npm i --save copy-to-clipboard
- Can be utilized using wzrd.in. Add following script to your page:
<script src="https://wzrd.in/standalone/copy-to-clipboard@latest" async></script>
You will have window.copyToClipboard
exposed for you to use.
This project has some automated tests, that will run using nightwatch on top of selenium.
npm i
npm test
This library has built-in Typescript definitions.
import * as copy from 'copy-to-clipboard';