![]() Once you did that you got a full slate of potential configurations and even a choice of other characters. The trick, as I recall, was to hold down the command key and click on Max himself. original) Macintosh.Ī lot of Mac users hated Max, but that was because they couldn't figure out how to turn off or adjust the intrusive digital assistant. But I use a Mac, and the default digital assistant in Microsoft Office for the Macintosh was Max, not Clipy. It's been a long time since I had to do something like that on an application - macOS is far more clever these days, and all sorts of upgrades are much more 'safer' and very predictable than, say, a decade ago.It would probably bring back a lot of memories if I was a Windows user. I wonder if this is some kind of weird security feature that requires activation (or deactivation.) for Flycut to be able to restore its status to launch itself at login. even when doing a 'major' upgrade (say, the jump from Mojave to Catalina, or from Catalina to Big Sur), the list of items on the Pasteboard remains as it was before the reboot! It's only the checkbox for 'Launch Flycut on login' that may not 'survive' a reboot. Oh, and I confirm that all the other options are correctly saved between as many reboots as possible. It's thus impossible to predict if Flycut will forget the 'Launch Flycut on login' checkbox on the next reboot. I've seen reboots where Flycut did launch on start, but I cannot say what was different at that time (except, of course, that macOS upgrades may not be always changing the same files/configurations in the same way - and possibly in some cases it touches something that makes Flycut 'forget' it's supposed to be launched on login, and in some cases that does not happen.). In fact, it's rather unpredictable when it happens (much less why). Why is that so hard to reproduce.? Well, it does not happen that way all the time. and, on opening Flycut Preferences after a reboot, the checkbox is indeed off! So I check it again, and forget about the setting for some weeks or months, until a new macOS upgrade comes along, the MacBook needs to reboot again, and, once more, Flycut does not launch, and the checkbox is off. In other words, after a reboot, Flycut does not launch in spite of that checkbox theoretically being on. I hardly reboot and/or log off my MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2014), currently running macOS Big Sur Version 11.0 Beta (20A5323l) after an upgrade earlier today, but it seems to me that (at least after an operating system upgrade), Flycut 'forgets' to be launched on login. IOS App Store: Download from the App Store here Useĭocumentation: Mac Help File / iOS Help File DevelopĬontributors: Check the list of contributors here Mac App Store: Download from the App Store hereĭRM-Free: Download latest DRM-Free version here If you had previous version of Flycut installed, you might need to remove if from Accessibility first and add it again. But don't fortget to give Flycut access in System Preferences -> Security & Privacy -> Privacy -> Accessibility. You can also swipe web links in the history to open them without placing them on the clipboard.ĭonation: If you like Flycut, you can donate here Installįor OSX 10.13 and older use DRM-Free versionįor OSX 10.14 and later use either App Store or DRM-Free versions. Later, you can tap any item in the history list to place it on the clipboard. On iOS, every time you open Flycut, it checks for a new clipping and stores it in history. ![]() You can change the hotkey and other settings in preferences. Later, you can paste it using Shift-Command-V even if you have something different in your current clipboard. On the Mac, every time you copy a code piece, Flycut stores it in history. It's based on an open source app called Jumpcut. Description: Flycut is a clean and simple clipboard manager for developers. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |