Copy And Paste
In human-computer interaction, cut and paste and copy and paste offer user-interface paradigms for transferring text, data, files or objects from a source to a destination. Most ubiquitously, users require the ability to cut and paste sections of plain text. This paradigm has close associations with graphical user interfaces that use pointing devices such as a computer mouse (by Drag And Drop, for example).
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BackLinks: 2003-04-27-WebOutliner | 2006-08-24-CanterGoogleLockin | 2007-07-01-IphoneNoCopyPaste | 2008-06-28-YeggeRhinosAndTigers | 2009-03-18-Iphone3 | 2010-12-14-GoogleEditionsEbookstoreLaunches | 2017-05-26-RaoFrankenstacksAndRhizomes | BookServer | DragAndDrop | MemoryMachinesTheEvolutionOfHypertext | TabLet
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