Question:
clipboard? help!!!!!!!!!!!!!! plz!!!!!!!!!!!?
rleever
2009-07-13 15:41:13 UTC
how do i accsess it?????!?!!?1?1!!!!!!! ive tryed everything!!!!

what i want to do is take a screenshot and sent it in an email some how. plz help!!!
Six answers:
Big Don
2009-07-13 15:50:12 UTC
Press the "Print Screen" button to take a screen-shot.



Open up a graphic-editor program. Windows usually comes with a program installed called "MS Paint", usually can be found by clicking Start, All Programs, Accessories, then Paint.



From the menu, click "Edit" then "Paste" (could be different according to what graphic editor program you're using though).



Crop and re-size it as desired, then click "File" and "Save as" to save the picture to you computer.



Cheers! :)
satiyagraha
2009-07-13 22:52:14 UTC
** Take a screenshot:

The simpliest way is to hit "printscreen" button in your keyboard.

** See it:

Go to ms paint (to do this, simply click start and then run and type mspaint and hit enter) And there paste it (ctrl+v) . This will paste the screenshot you have just taken on to the blank paint page.

** Create the picture file:

Now save the picture in ms paint into your hard drive, preferably as a jpg file (hit ctrl+s). there it is . Now you can easily send this file to your frinds as an email.



As an alternative solution you can go to the mail writing page and there you can paste it directly after taking the screenshot. But this may not work in some mail servers.
fxyrx
2009-07-13 22:50:12 UTC
Operating system-specific clipboards



[edit] Microsoft Windows

Main article: ClipBook Viewer



In some versions of the Microsoft Windows operating system, the contents of the clipboard can be viewed at any time by using the Clipboard Viewer (Clipbook Viewer in Windows XP and 2000) application (clipbrd.exe). It helps if you run search for this program by clicking start* then search* and type in clipbrd.exe. It should be found in windows/system32. In older versions of Windows the common practice was to open a copy of the "Notepad" or "Wordpad" editor, and paste into that. Often these operations are available from the "Edit" pull down menu and they may be available via a context menu, usually accessible by context-clicking in the window or dialog entry that is to be cut from or pasted into.



The standard Windows keybindings are:



* Ctrl-c to copy data onto the clipboard

* Ctrl-x to cut data to the clipboard

* Ctrl-v to paste data from the clipboard



alternative keybindings (available in most windows programs)



* Ctrl-Insert is copy

* Shift-Delete is cut

* Shift-Insert is paste



the advantage of the alternative keys is that the fingers can stay close to the arrow and selection keys when you are editing a large body of text



The Clipbook Viewer was removed entirely in Windows Vista.



[edit] Mac OS X



In the Macintosh Operating System the contents can be viewed by selecting the Show Clipboard menu item from the Finder's Edit menu. Since this is not available in all applications Clipboard managers were evolved. The first was the multiple clip tool CopyPaste.



The standard Mac OS keybindings are:



* Command-c to copy data into the clipboard

* Command-x to cut into it

* Command-v to paste data from the clipboard.



Also available as a secondary, text-only clipboard, is an emacs-style kill-ring (a stack of text strings). This works in all applications that use standard Cocoa text boxes:



* Ctrl-k to kill from cursor to end-of-line.

* Ctrl-y to yank from kill-ring to cursor.



[edit] X Window System



The X Window System commonly used on Unix and Linux systems provides a clipboard implementation via selections. Selections are asynchronous, so data is copied and converted into the desired format only on-demand.



The usage and handling of various selections is not standardized. However most modern toolkits and desktop environments, such as GNOME or KDE, follow a widely accepted convention, outlined in the freedesktop.org specification. One selection, CLIPBOARD, is used for traditional clipboard semantics, with shortcuts similar to Windows. Another selection, PRIMARY, is an X11-specific mechanism. Data is "copied" immediately upon highlighting and pasted with the third (middle) mouse button. This is usually separate from the CLIPBOARD selection and does not change its contents.
2009-07-13 22:54:09 UTC
Windows:



Press PrintScrn, PrintScreen, or a similarly named key to the right of F12

Open any image editor, press Ctrl+v

Save the image as whatever you want.

Open your email client, and attach the image file to your email.



Ubuntu Linux:



Applications -> Accessories -> Screen Shot.

Attach the image to your email.
Max
2009-07-13 22:51:07 UTC
Hit print-screen on your keyboard to get the screenshot onto the clip board



Then open MS Paint, MS word, or ANY other program that can have an image... (I recommend paint)



hold "shift" and click "insert" on your keyboard and it will paste the image. (or in MS paint, click "edit" then "paste")



Then save the file, and attach to your email. :)
has_infoooo
2009-07-13 23:06:14 UTC
salam

normaly just type in start/run : clipbrd.exe

u will have the clipbord viewer

else

u can download it from here : http://www.alexander.com/SymServe/clipbrd.exe/37ECAB381b000/clipbrd.exe

bye for now


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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