How do you copy and paste into Git Bash

和自甴很熟 提交于 2019-12-02 13:46:18
Amber

Press Insert.

Also, to copy from the window, try clicking the console's window icon (topleft) and choosing Edit -> Mark, then drag a box on the text, then press Enter. (You can also paste via the window icon menu, but the key is faster.)

UPDATE

Starting from Windows 10 the CTRL + C, CTRL + V and a lot of other feature are implemented in conhost.exe so they should work with every console utility on Windows. (You have to enable Properties -> Option tab -> Quick Edit Mode)

Ref: http://blogs.windows.com/buildingapps/2014/10/07/console-improvements-in-the-windows-10-technical-preview/

Dan Rigby

Aside from using the edit menu commands, you can directly paste into the git bash window using the keyboard shortcut, Insert.

hobbs

It's not really a function of git, msys, or bash; every windows console program is stuck using the same cumbersome copy/paste mechanism for historical reasons. Turning on QuickEdit mode can help -- or you can install a nice alternative console like this one, and change your git bash shortcut to use it instead.

HaoQi Li

Copy:

Long-term solution: Click on Topleft icon > Defaults > Select "QuickEdit Mode" under "Edit Options" > Okay

Then select the text you want to copy. Press Enter

Short-term solution: Click on Topleft icon > Edit > Mark. Press Enter.

Paste:

Press Insert

(If the "QuickEdit Mode" is on, Right clicking might work too.)

Use Shift + Insert like in linux bash

Edit: It works even in putty.

The way I do this is to hold Alt then press Space, then E and finally P.

On Windows Alt jumps to the window menu, Space opens it, E selects Edit and P executes the Paste command.

Get these correct in succession and you can paste a snippet in under 2 seconds.

This is suggested by the github help page:

clip < filename

this copies the contents of filename to the clipboard and is useful for doing things like copying your id_rsa.pub to a web form.

Ehigie Paul

For paste in Git BASH CTRL + P

I'm back to Windows for the first time in a long time and this got me cursing like a docker. I finally found this:

Enabling "Ctrl+Shift+letter shortcuts" got me to a Linux-like behaviour that has lowered my blood pressure. Ctrl+Shift+C/V now works.

Right click on the Git Bash shortcut and switch to the Options tab. Enable Quick Edit Mode and click OK.

Now you can use right click to paste into Git Bash, even passwords for remote push, which you can't do with Insert.

This also enables copy easily. Just left click and drag in the console window to select any block of text. Now right click on the selection and the text block will be copied in RAM. This is way more easier and intuitive than the other ways.

Image source: https://danlimerick.wordpress.com/2011/07/23/git-for-windows-tip-how-to-copy-and-paste-into-bash/

console2 ( http://sourceforge.net/projects/console/ ) is my go to terminal front end.

it add great features like copy/paste, resizable windows, and tabs. you can also integrate as many "terminals" as you want into the app. i personally use cmd (the basic windows prompt), mingW/msysGit, and i have shortcuts for diving directly into the python and mysql interpreters.

the "shell" argument i use for git (on a win7 machine) is:

C:\Windows\SysWOW64\cmd.exe /c ""C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\sh.exe" --login -i"

Patricia

Ctrl + insert did it for me in Windows.

if your intention is copy/paste comments for git commits, try set the enviromental variable EDITOR as your favorite plain-text editor (notepad, notepad++ ...) and when you will commit, don't give him the -m option and Git will open your favorite editor for copy/paste you comment

Get Console2. You configure it to do it multiple different ways. Works with bash or Windows command prompts.

You can also just right-click in the console window. Be sure (as per earlier answers) to enable both 'Edit Options' in the Properties panel (from the System menu).

In the properties of the console you can activate the "Quick Edit Mode" under "Edit Options", that way you can paste inside the console just right clicking. Or you can use 'Insert' as they say.

I was actually wondering how to do this today...and coincidentally, Phil Haack posted a tip about using posh-git (Git on powershell), which gives you tab auto-complete and a few more cool bits. I'm not going back to Git bash.

check it out

http://haacked.com/archive/2011/12/13/better-git-with-powershell.aspx

HoaPhan

Yep, copy from somewhere else using ctrl+c and paste using INSERT. Work for me on Window 8.

after this setting you can use ctrl + shift + v ( for windows)

Кирилл Васин

In windows I'm not sure about copy but for paste works Ctrl+Insert. In Linux copy: CTRL+SHIFT+C, paste: CTRL+SHIFT+V

I use the mouse:

  1. mark
  2. right click -> copy
  3. right click -> paste

COPY:Click the title bar, choose mark, then select the content you want to copy. PASTE: Copy what you want to past, focus on the bash, hit the insert key on the keyboard.

For users working on Windows 7, Shift + INSERT works fine.

HoaPhan

I take it you're not on a Mac. Use insert key.

Here are a lot of answers already but non of them worked for me. Fyi I have a Lenovo laptop with win10 and what works for me is the following:


Paste = Shift+fn+prt sc


Copy = Shift+fn+c

I also go through the same problem, git bash does not support tradition method to copy and paste in windows but you can simply copy and paste in single command

SHIFT+fn+INSERT

If you click at the icon on the upper left corner, a drop-down menu will appear, and you can find the option to copy/paste from there.

To copy select the text and click CTRL+INS

To paste place the cursor where you want to print

and click SHIFT+INS

For more options,on the top left click on git-bash icon

Borune

MacBook pro doesnt have an ins key. Use FN + ENTER to paste

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!