![]() Of course, there are lots of options to customize that behavior, like ignoring certain types of data or certain source apps (like password managers). Whatever you copy to the clipboard gets stored by Alfred. Where does that stuff go, and how do I retrieve it? Nowadays, with Universal Clipboard and multiple Apple devices, this even includes your iPhone and iPad-amazing in itself. The Alfred clipboard history just keeps the last x items you copied to the clipboard (typically using ⌘C), from whatever source. Clipboard History: The Feature You Never Knew You Needed. To my delight, there is a very recent blog article over at on exactly that topic, even with the perfect title. This enables muscle memory to work on my behalf. In other words, Command-Shift-V is the ticket to working with multiple files at once – something that I previously thought only Quicksilver could do.As I hate memorizing keyboard shortcuts, I have set Alfred preferences to have it show up by double-tapping the control (⌃) key.
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