Excel hates it when ClipMate sends Ctrl+V, but doesn't mind if you paste from the Edit | Paste menu. Then there is the capability to automatically select a particular format string based on the title of the application that you are pasting into. If you go to User Preferences | Pasting, you'll see that the Timestamp paste actually sends the regular Ctrl+V, then the ENTER key, then"Captured At:" and then the date/time of the original capture. Paste with an Enter, Paste with a Tab, and Paste with a timestamp. Then you have Shift+Insert and the Edit Menu paste (sends Alt+E, then P) for applications that prefer those methods of invoking their paste function. The default entry, simply sends Ctrl+V to the application. Select one, and it'll be used on the subsequent paste operation. You have a drop-down list attached to the QuickPaste Toolbar, and the titles of the formatting strings are visible. Here is a look at the formatting strings that are typically available by default. Do you need to key in some static text like "user name:" before every clip? How about pasting the Source URL after the clip? Or the title? Maybe some TABs and ENTER keys need to be pressed? Don't worry, the QuickPaste Format Strings can handle all of that. So this feature was designed to let you configure QuickPaste to handle just about any pasting task. Looking over our past suggestions from users, we found that people sometimes need the date/time, source URL, and clip title as well. The ENTER and TAB keys, were natural additions.
![pasting url clipmate pasting url clipmate](https://crack4windows.com/thumbnail?path=%2Fcontent%2Fimages%2Fscreens%2Fwindows-portable-applications-portable-clipmate_1.png)
While we were at it, we added the capability to insert other items into the keystrokes. So we added this capability to let you can control what keys are sent during pasting. But sometimes you find an application that works better if you use its own Edit menu, or you may find an older application that uses Shift+Insert instead of Ctrl+V. When QuickPaste sends data into the target application, it does so by placing data onto the system clipboard, and then sending some keystrokes to the application. Introducing ClipMate 7 > Basic Operation > Pasting > QuickPaste > Using QuickPaste Format Strings