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In macOS, a Text Clipping is a selection of text that you've dragged from an application to another location on your Mac, where it becomes a unique kind of standalone file.

The relatively little-known feature has been around since at least Mac OS 9, and it offers a convenient way to save out pieces of text from pretty much anywhere for later use in another app or document.

macos-text-clippings-hidden-feature.jpg

To create a Text Clipping, simply highlight any piece of text, then hold left-click and drag it with your mouse to your Desktop or an open Finder window.

This saves the highlighted text – including any rich text formatting – as a .textclipping file named after the first few words of text that you selected, but you can easily rename it to make it more identifiable.

macos-text-clipping-finder.jpg

To use the selected text in another file like a Pages document, drag the Text Clipping into the open document and the text will be automatically pasted wherever the cursor is located.

You can paste the clipping in the same way into all sorts of open files and apps, including browser search engines, Mail compose windows, Xcode projects, and more.

macos-text-clipping-pages.jpg

To quickly view the contents of a Text Clipping, simply select the file and invoke Quick Look with a tap of the spacebar.

You can also double-click a Text Clipping to view the text in a dedicated window, and even highlight and copy (Command-C) just a snippet of the text from this window for pasting elsewhere.

text-clipping-contents.jpg

Text clippings can speed up many repetitive tasks, making things like reusing email/letter templates and code snippets a cinch. If clippings become indispensable to your workflow, consider creating a dedicated folder to store them, otherwise they can quickly clutter up your desktop.

Bear in mind that Text Clippings store content in a unique format that may not be compatible across all platforms or devices. So if you're sharing clippings, it's best to convert them into standard text formats to ensure they can be opened elsewhere.

Article Link: Quick macOS Tip: Create and Use Text Clippings for Productivity
 
I use Yoink (and recently Dropzone) for this - it creates an invisible area on the side of the screen to which you can drag text, images, video, or any kind of file for temporary store from any window or application. Then you just drag it from Yoink (or Dropzone) to wherever you want it.

The feature in this article sounds like a text only version of that.
 
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Oh thats useful. I will save some texts I use frequently for emails and then put them in a folder and stack it in the dock. :)
 
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Yes I remember impressing Windows users in 1995 with text clippings and drag and drop on System 7. I think it was introduced in 7.5
Yes, System 7.5! I remember because the big easter egg for that version was typing the phrase "secret about box" somewhere and dragging that phrase to the desktop to create a text clipping. It would then open a Breakout game with the names of the people who worked on it as the bricks.
 
unless you need to store them just use a clipboard manager. why doesn't apple just make a proper clipboard with history support?
 
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Wow, that’s a genuinely useful tip! MacOS really needs a system to surface little known features like this.
 
Sometimes I think I come to this website just for the productivity tips. Between this and the ones about the mac app switcher, it's been a great week! Thank you!
 
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Clippings have been around since System 7 back in the early 90s. Over the years, support for it has come and gone, but it’s always been there.

I'm always amazed at how little users know about the Mac.

And the author is simply reposting old articles:
 
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its been around since system 7 or so. 30+ years. But it's nice that it's still a drag an drop, spatial way of oeprating information on a computer. This is something Mac OS has lost over the years. There's still remants here and there like dragging a file onto a file save/open dialog to get there. Dropping a file onto an app to open. Draggin an app icon from the title bar to the desktop to save the file. But I really miss the old spatial file system , I wish they kept it and had a file browser as a separate app.
 
I use Maccy for this, highly recommend it.
Came here to say exactly this. There are tons of apps that provide the user with a much more advanced version of this system functionality and Maccy is a beautifully simply app that just works. I have been using it for years.
 
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