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Can I receive a callback whenever an NSPasteboard is written to?

I've read Apple's Pasteboard Programming Guide, but it doesn't answer a particular question I have.

I'm trying to write a Cocoa application (for OS X, not iOS) that will keep track of everything that is written to the general pasteboard (so, whenever any application copies and pastes, but not, say, drags-and-drops, which also makes use of NSPasteboard). I could (almost) accomplish this by basically polling the general pasteboard on a background thread constantly, and checking changeCount. Of course, doing this would make me feel very dirty on the inside.

My question is, is there a way to ask the Pasteboard server to notify开发者_开发问答 me through some sort of callback any time a change is made to the general pasteboard? I couldn't find anything in the NSPasteboard class reference, but I'm hoping it lurks somewhere else.

Another way I could imagine accomplishing this is if there was a way to swap out the general pasteboard implementation with a subclass of NSPasteboard that I could define myself to issue a callback. Maybe something like this is possible?

I would greatly prefer if this were possible with public, App Store-legal APIs, but if using a private API is necessary, I'll take that too.

Thanks!


Unfortunately the only available method is by polling (booo!). There are no notifications and there's nothing to observe for changed pasteboard contents. Check out Apple's ClipboardViewer sample code to see how they deal with inspecting the clipboard. Add a (hopefully not overzealous) timer to keep checking for differences and you've got a basic (if clunky) solution that should be App-Store-Friendly.

File an enhancement request at bugreporter.apple.com to request notifications or some other callback. Unfortunately it wouldn't help you until the next major OS release at the earliest but for now it's polling until we all ask them to give us something better.


There was once a post on a mailing list where the decision against a notification api was described. I can't find it right now though. The bottom line was that probably too many applications would register for that api even though they really wouldn't need to. If you then copy something the whole system goes through the new clipboard content like crazy, creating lots of work for the computer. So i don't think they'll change that behavior anytime soon. The whole NSPasteboard API is internally built around using the changeCount, too. So even your custom subclass of NSPasteboard would still have to keep polling.

If you really want to check if the pasteboard changed, just keep observing the changeCount very half second. Comparing integers is really fast so there's really no performance issue here.


Based on answer provided by Joshua I came up with similar implementation but in swift, here is the link to its gist: PasteboardWatcher.swift

Code snippet from same:

class PasteboardWatcher : NSObject {

    // assigning a pasteboard object
    private let pasteboard = NSPasteboard.generalPasteboard()

    // to keep track of count of objects currently copied
    // also helps in determining if a new object is copied
    private var changeCount : Int

    // used to perform polling to identify if url with desired kind is copied
    private var timer: NSTimer?

    // the delegate which will be notified when desired link is copied
    weak var delegate: PasteboardWatcherDelegate?

    // the kinds of files for which if url is copied the delegate is notified
    private let fileKinds : [String]

    /// initializer which should be used to initialize object of this class
    /// - Parameter fileKinds: an array containing the desired file kinds
    init(fileKinds: [String]) {
        // assigning current pasteboard changeCount so that it can be compared later to identify changes
        changeCount = pasteboard.changeCount

        // assigning passed desired file kinds to respective instance variable
        self.fileKinds = fileKinds

        super.init()
    }
    /// starts polling to identify if url with desired kind is copied
    /// - Note: uses an NSTimer for polling
    func startPolling () {
        // setup and start of timer
        timer = NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(2, target: self, selector: Selector("checkForChangesInPasteboard"), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
    }

    /// method invoked continuously by timer
    /// - Note: To keep this method as private I referred this answer at stackoverflow - [Swift - NSTimer does not invoke a private func as selector](http://stackoverflow.com/a/30947182/217586)
    @objc private func checkForChangesInPasteboard() {
        // check if there is any new item copied
        // also check if kind of copied item is string
        if let copiedString = pasteboard.stringForType(NSPasteboardTypeString) where pasteboard.changeCount != changeCount {

            // obtain url from copied link if its path extension is one of the desired extensions
            if let fileUrl = NSURL(string: copiedString) where self.fileKinds.contains(fileUrl.pathExtension!){

                // invoke appropriate method on delegate
                self.delegate?.newlyCopiedUrlObtained(copiedUrl: fileUrl)
            }

            // assign new change count to instance variable for later comparison
            changeCount = pasteboard.changeCount
        }
    }
}

Note: in the shared code I am trying to identify if user has copied a file url or not, the provided code can easily be modified for other general purposes.


For those who need simplified version of code snippet that gets the job done in Swift 5.7,

it just works (base on @Devarshi code):

func watch(using closure: @escaping (_ copiedString: String) -> Void) {
    let pasteboard = NSPasteboard.general
    var changeCount = NSPasteboard.general.changeCount

    Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1.0, repeats: true) { _ in
        guard let copiedString = pasteboard.string(forType: .string),
              pasteboard.changeCount != changeCount else { return }

        defer {
            changeCount = pasteboard.changeCount
        }
        
        closure(copiedString)
    }
}

how to use is as below:

watch {
    print("detected : \($0)")
}

then if you attempt copy any text in your pasteboard, it will watch and print out to the console like below..

detected : your copied message in pasteboard
detected : your copied message in pasteboard

in case, full code sample for how to use it for example in SwiftUI:

import SwiftUI

@main
struct TestApp: App {
    var body: some Scene {
        WindowGroup {
            ContentView()
                .onAppear {

                    watch {
                        print("detect : \($0)")
                    }

                }
        }
    }
    
    func watch(using closure: @escaping (_ copiedString: String) -> Void) {
        let pasteboard = NSPasteboard.general
        var changeCount = NSPasteboard.general.changeCount

        Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1.0, repeats: true) { _ in
            guard let copiedString = pasteboard.string(forType: .string),
                  pasteboard.changeCount != changeCount else { return }

            defer {
                changeCount = pasteboard.changeCount
            }
            
            closure(copiedString)
        }
    }
}


It's not necessary to poll. Pasteboard would generally only be changed by the current view is inactive or does not have focus. Pasteboard has a counter that is incremented when contents change. When window regains focus (windowDidBecomeKey), check if changeCount has changed then process accordingly.

This does not capture every change, but lets your application respond if the Pasteboard is different when it becomes active.

In Swift...

var pasteboardChangeCount = NSPasteboard.general().changeCount
func windowDidBecomeKey(_ notification: Notification)
{   Swift.print("windowDidBecomeKey")
    if  pasteboardChangeCount != NSPasteboard.general().changeCount
    {   viewController.checkPasteboard()
        pasteboardChangeCount  = NSPasteboard.general().changeCount
    }
}


I have a solution for more strict case: detecting when your content in NSPasteboard was replaced by something else.

If you create a class that conforms to NSPasteboardWriting and pass it to -writeObjects: along with the actual content, NSPasteboard will retain this object until its content is replaced. If there are no other strong references to this object, it get deallocated.

Deallocation of this object is the moment when new NSPasteboard got new content.

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