Simple utility functions to read and write from the system clipboards of Windows, OS X, and Unix-like systems (which require either xclip or xsel.)
Install from CRAN
install.packages("clipr")
Or try the development version
remotes::install_github("mdlincoln/clipr")
clipr is pipe-friendly, and will default to returning the same object that was passed in.
library("clipr")
#> Welcome to clipr. See ?write_clip for advisories on writing to the clipboard in R.
res <- write_clip(c("Text", "for", "clipboard"))
res
#> [1] "Text" "for" "clipboard"
cb <- read_clip()
cb
#> [1] "Text" "for" "clipboard"
To capture the string that clipr writes to the clipboard, specify
return_new = TRUE
. Character vectors with length > 1 will be
collapsed with system-appropriate line breaks, unless otherwise
specified
cb <- write_clip(c("Text", "for", "clipboard"), return_new = TRUE)
cb
#> [1] "Text\nfor\nclipboard"
cb <- write_clip(c("Text", "for", "clipboard"), breaks = ", ", return_new = TRUE)
cb
#> [1] "Text, for, clipboard"
write_clip
also tries to intelligently handle data.frames and
matrices, rendering them with write.table
so that they can be pasted
into a spreadsheet like Excel.
tbl <- data.frame(a = c(1, 2, 3), b = c(4, 5, 6))
cb <- write_clip(tbl, return_new = TRUE)
cb
#> [1] "a\tb\n1\t4\n2\t5\n3\t6"
read_clip_tbl
will try to parse clipboard contents from spreadsheets
into data frames directly.
See the “Developing with clipr” vignette included with this package for advisories on writing code that calls clipr functions.
(a non-comprehensive list)
- reprex by @jennybc takes R code on the clipboard and renders a reproducible example from it, ready to then paste on to GitHub, Stack Overflow, or the like.
- datapasta by @milesmcbain eases the copying and pasting of R objects in and out of different sources (Excel, Google Sheets).