ClipboardWatcher
Watches your clipboard and saves the data allowing you to look back upon your copies over time
Text
This is the default view when starting up ClipboardWatcher. It shows every line of text you copied (right click copy on something, or ctrl + C)
You can delete records by selecting one or multiple and pressing the DEL key on your keyboard
Images
In this view you can look back at the images you have copied, either by pressing key combinations of the print screen button, using ctr+c on images or right click copying them. The images you see here are already saved on your hard drive If you wish to delete the images you can right click delete or choose one of the other options.
Options:
- Rename | Renames the image file name to your input
- Edit | Opens the image in paint so you can edit it
- Delete | Deletes the image from ClipboardWatcher and from your hard drive
The "Open containing folder..." Opens the folder where the image is saved in windows explorer
Double click an image to open it in windows photo viewer
History
Here, you can look back at your history of copies over time. Select a year/month/day and you will be able to look back on the images or text you have copied over time
Select the Image history button (Default) to look back at the images you have copied
Select the Text history Button to look back at the text you have copied
Depending on how long you have been using ClipboardWatcher, you can take a look back through time
For copied images, simply select the file name in the right hand panel after having selected a date
And here too, you can right click the file name and choose from one of the options
You can also look at these image/text copies on your hard drive instead of through ClipboardWatcher, whichever you prefer.
Settings
Here you can set where ClipboardWatcher should store the copied text/images. This can be usefull for if you don't want to store the images on the default C:\users\documents
location if that is for example your SSD which does not have a lot of storage
Written in: C# - Windows Forms
Uses:
SQLite
Entity Framework