I select some text and copy it using Ctrl + c. Now the text is in the system clipboard. I can paste this code using
Ctrl + v in a file and run wc
for the file to check the count of characters, lines and words.
But if I want to count the characters of the text in the clipboard without saving this in a file, is there a solution?
You would need to release the clipboard contents somehow. Avoiding files can be done via a pipeline. For that there exists the
xclip
utility. It is not installed by default, so unless another program installed it as a dependency you may want to runOnce you install it, you can do
Note that there exists more than one clipboard aka selection in Linux, hence why the use of
-o sel clip
flags. Of course, with use of a pipeline this avoids use of intermediate files as requested in the question.Another side benefit of this utility is that you can use this utility not just in a GUI terminal, but within any virtual tty console by appending
DISPLAY=:0
to the beginning of the command (or the other appropriate display, if your X Window aka GUI server is configured for more than one display). See the related post here on that same topic. Thus, you avoid using keyboard shortcuts for releasing clipboard contents, and you can write scripts that use the clipboard in a more powerful way.There is also another utility called
xsel
which operates in a similar fashion. You can read about it in a related post.One solution is 'echo'ing the clipboard content and pass the content to
wc
:0 newline, 2 word and 9 characters.
As your text is inside your clipboard, you can paste the content in the terminal easily using Ctrl+Shift+v.