How do you copy and paste a paste?

In Windows, you can copy and paste text, images, links, and other objects from one location to another. Initially, the clipboard limited you to copying and pasting only one item at a time, forcing you to make a series of round trips between your source and destination if you needed to move a whole lineup of items. Then, in 2018, Windows 10 introduced a clipboard history feature that could store multiple items and sync them across different computers.

This tool certainly gets the job done, but if you want additional options, a third-party clipboard utility can store and manage multiple items in your clipboard. Most Windows clipboard utilities work the same way, allowing you to use the Cut (Ctrl + X) or Copy (Ctrl + C) shortcuts, while a custom Paste keystroke is set up in the utility program. This maneuver pastes a certain item from the list or displays a menu of all items in the clipboard so you can choose which one you want to paste. Here's how it works.


Windows 10 and 11 Clipboard Tool

Microsoft Windows 11 Preview

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About Lance Whitney

Contributor

How do you copy and paste a paste?

I've been working for PCMag since early 2016 writing tutorials, how-to pieces, and other articles on consumer technology. Beyond PCMag, I've written news stories and tutorials for a variety of other websites and publications, including CNET, ZDNet, TechRepublic, Macworld, Popular Science, Time, Fortune, US News & World Report, and AARP Magazine. I spent seven years writing breaking news for CNET as one of the site’s East Coast reporters. I've also written two books for Wiley & Sons—Windows 8: Five Minutes at a Time and Teach Yourself Visually LinkedIn.

When you're working on your computer, you want to do things as quickly as possible. And you probably don't want to repeat typing the same thing over and over again.

Knowing how to copy and paste text and other data will help you work efficiently without repeating yourself.

So in this guide, I will show you the different ways you can copy and paste text, files, and folders on your Windows PC, including from the command line.

Then I'll also show you how to access your computer's clipboard so you can see the history of your copied items.

How to Copy and Paste Text on a Windows PC

You can copy text by highlighting it in any editor, right-clicking on the highlighted text, and then selecting “Copy”.

How do you copy and paste a paste?

To highlight multiple words, hold down the left button on your mouse, then scroll down to the point you want to stop copying the text. Right-click and select “Copy” to copy the text you've highlighted.

To highlight the entire text in a document, press CTRL + A.

If you are working with a lot of text in MS Word, for example, you can double-click on a word to select it, triple-click on any word in a line to select the whole paragraph, right-click, and then select “Copy”.

To paste the copied text, right-click on any editor again and select “Paste”. Make sure you right click exactly where you want the pasted text to be.

How do you copy and paste a paste?

How do you copy and paste a paste?

The shortcut you can use to copy text in any editor is CTRL + C. To paste the text, press and hold CTRL then V.

How to Copy and Paste Files and Folders

To copy a file on your Windows PC, right-click on the file and select “Copy” from the list of items that pops up:

How do you copy and paste a paste?

To paste the copied file or folder into another folder, right-click on an empty space in the folder and select “Paste”:

How do you copy and paste a paste?

You can also copy files and folders in bulk. You do this by holding down the SHIFT key and using the up and down arrow keys to move up and down through your files. Then you right-click and select “Copy”.

If you don’t want certain files or folders to be selected, hold the CTRL key instead of SHIFT and use your mouse to select each file and folder you want. Then just right-click and select “Copy”.

To select all the files or folders in a folder, or select all files and folders in a folder together, press CTRL + A.

How to Copy and Paste Text in the Command Line

In the command line, CTRL + C and CTRL + V mean different things, but you can still copy and paste right there.

Open the command line by typing “cmd” in the Windows search bar. To copy any text, highlight the text with your mouse or trackpad, then right-click on the highlighted text.

To paste the text in the command line, right-click again.

In the command line, you can still use CTRL + C and CTRL + V to copy and paste. To do this, point your cursor at the top of the window and right-click to select properties:

How do you copy and paste a paste?

Check “Use Ctrl+Shift+C/V as Copy/Paste”:

How do you copy and paste a paste?

Now, you can use CTRL + C and CTRL + V for copy and paste in the command line.

How to Access Your Windows Clipboard

If you are doing a lot of copy and paste, you can only paste the last text you copy.

But what if you want to paste the penultimate (second from the last) or the antepenultimate (third from the last) item you copied? If you press CTRL3 or you right-click and select “Paste”, the last item you copied gets pasted.

To access the previous items you've copied on a Windows computer, simply press and hold the CTRL4 (Windows) key, and then V. There, you will see a list of items you have copied since you turned on your PC.

How do you copy and paste a paste?

If you have never accessed the clipboard before, you will be prompted to turn on clipboard history for your Windows machine.

To paste an item from the clipboard, left-click on it.

Conclusion

In this guide, you learned about the several ways you can copy and paste texts and files, including how you can do it in the command line.

You also learned how to see your clipboard history, so you can paste any of the previous items you have copied.

Thank you for reading. If you find this article helpful, please share it with your friends and family.

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How do you copy and paste a paste?
Kolade Chris

Web developer and technical writer focusing on frontend technologies.


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