OS: Kubuntu 18.04 or Ubuntu 18.04
I want to remove the first seven characters of certain strings I copy. For example, I want to first copy and then convert
1234567890
to
890
I can do so with the following code:
xsel -b -o | cut -c 8-
I can put the code into a simple script and can run that script successfully in a terminal.
#!/bin/bash
xsel -b -o | cut -c 8-
But that does not help to paste the modified contents into a GUI-based text file . So I assigned keyboard shortcuts to the code directly or to the corresponding script. But either way, nothing happens in Kubuntu 18.04 or in Ubuntu 18.04 when I press the assigned keyboard shortcut.
Even
#!/bin/bash
bash -c 'xsel -b -o | cut -c 8-'
does not work.
Why is that? Is is something peculiar to xsel (and to xclip which poses the same issue)?
bash -c '...'then or put it in a script file which you can call. Also as it is, your script/command outputs to the console, which is nonexistent when it runs as a keyboard shortcut. What do you want to happen with the result? Put it back into the clipboard? Append it to a fixed text file? Pop up a notification? You can also automatically watch for clipboard events and modify the contents instantly without extra shortcut, if that is what you need. Please clarify. – Byte Commander Nov 12 '18 at 14:19bash -croute as well but had the same result. I want the modified string to be pasted into a GUI-based text editor or the terminal. No, I don't want to automatically watch for clipboard events. – DK Bose Nov 12 '18 at 14:27xdotool key ctrl+xto cut text to the clipboard – vanadium Nov 12 '18 at 14:42