Clipboard data formats
Flash Player 10 and later, Adobe AIR 1.0 and
later
Clipboard formats describe the data placed
in a Clipboard object. Flash Player or AIR automatically translates
the standard data formats between ActionScript data types and system
clipboard formats. In addition, application objects can be transferred
within and between ActionScript-based applications using application-defined
formats.
A Clipboard object can contain representations of the same information
in different formats. For example, a Clipboard object representing
a Sprite could include a reference format for use within the same
application, a serialized format for use by another application
running in Flash Player or AIR, a bitmap format for use by an image
editor, and a file list format, perhaps with deferred rendering
to encode a PNG file, for copying or dragging a representation of
the Sprite to the file system.
Standard data formats
The constants
defining the standard format names are provided in the ClipboardFormats
class:
Constant
|
Description
|
TEXT_FORMAT
|
Text-format data is translated to and from
the ActionScript String class.
|
HTML_FORMAT
|
Text with HTML markup.
|
RICH_TEXT_FORMAT
|
Rich-text-format data is translated to and
from the ActionScript ByteArray class. The RTF markup is not interpreted
or translated in any way.
|
BITMAP_FORMAT
|
(AIR only) Bitmap-format data is translated
to and from the ActionScript BitmapData class.
|
FILE_LIST_FORMAT
|
(AIR only) File-list-format data is translated
to and from an array of ActionScript File objects.
|
URL_FORMAT
|
(AIR only) URL-format data is translated
to and from the ActionScript String class.
|
When
copying and pasting data in response to a
copy
,
cut
,
or
paste
event in HTML content hosted in an AIR
application, MIME types must be used instead of the ClipboardFormat
strings. The valid data MIME types are:
MIME type
|
Description
|
Text
|
"text/plain"
|
URL
|
"text/uri-list"
|
Bitmap
|
"image/x-vnd.adobe.air.bitmap"
|
File list
|
"application/x-vnd.adobe.air.file-list"
|
Note:
Rich text format data is not available from the
clipboardData
property
of the event object dispatched as a result of a
paste
event
within HTML content.
Custom data formats
You can use application-defined custom formats to transfer objects
as references or as serialized copies. References are valid only
within the same application. Serialized objects can be transferred
between applications, but can be used only with objects that remain
valid when serialized and deserialized. Objects can usually be serialized
if their properties are either simple types or serializable objects.
To add a serialized object to a Clipboard object, set the
serializable
parameter
to
true
when calling the
Clipboard.setData()
method.
The format name can be one of the standard formats or an arbitrary
string defined by your application.
Transfer modes
When
an object is written to the clipboard using a custom data format,
the object data can be read from the clipboard either as a reference
or as a serialized copy of the original object. There are four transfer
modes that determine whether objects are transferred as references
or as serialized copies:
Transfer mode
|
Description
|
ClipboardTransferModes.ORIGINAL_ONLY
|
Only a reference is returned. If no reference
is available, a null value is returned.
|
ClipboardTransferModes.ORIGINAL_PREFFERED
|
A reference is returned, if available. Otherwise
a serialized copy is returned.
|
ClipboardTransferModes.CLONE_ONLY
|
Only a serialized copy is returned. If no
serialized copy is available, a null value is returned.
|
ClipboardTransferModes.CLONE_PREFFERED
|
A serialized copy is returned, if available.
Otherwise a reference is returned.
|
Reading and writing custom data formats
When writing an object to the clipboard, you can use any string
that does not begin with the reserved prefixes
air:
or
flash:
for
the
format
parameter. Use the same string as the format to
read the object. The following examples illustrate how to read and
write objects to the clipboard:
public function createClipboardObject(object:Object):Clipboard{
var transfer:Clipboard = Clipboard.generalClipboard;
transfer.setData("object", object, true);
}
function createClipboardObject(object){
var transfer = new air.Clipboard();
transfer.setData("object", object, true);
}
To extract a serialized object from the clipboard object (after
a drop or paste operation), use the same format name and the
CLONE_ONLY
or
CLONE_PREFFERED
transfer
modes.
var transfer:Object = clipboard.getData("object", ClipboardTransferMode.CLONE_ONLY);
var transfer = clipboard.getData("object", air.ClipboardTransferMode.CLONE_ONLY);
A reference is always added to the Clipboard object. To extract
the reference from the clipboard object (after a drop or paste operation),
instead of the serialized copy, use the
ORIGINAL_ONLY
or
ORIGINAL_PREFFERED
transfer
modes:
var transferredObject:Object =
clipboard.getData("object", ClipboardTransferMode.ORIGINAL_ONLY);
var transferredObject =
clipboard.getData("object", air.ClipboardTransferMode.ORIGINAL_ONLY);
References are valid only if the Clipboard object originates
from the current application. Use the
ORIGINAL_PREFFERED
transfer
mode to access the reference when it is available, and the serialized
clone when the reference is not available.
Deferred rendering
If creating a data
format is computationally expensive, you can use deferred rendering
by supplying a function that supplies the data on demand. The function
is called only if a receiver of the drop or paste operation requests
data in the deferred format.
The rendering function is added to a Clipboard object using the
setDataHandler()
method.
The function must return the data in the appropriate format. For
example, if you called
setDataHandler(ClipboardFormat.TEXT_FORMAT, writeText)
, then
the
writeText()
function must return a string.
If a data format of the same type is added to a Clipboard object
with the
setData()
method, that data takes precedence
over the deferred version (the rendering function is never called).
The rendering function may or may not be called again if the same
clipboard data is accessed a second time.
Note:
On Mac OS X, deferred rendering works only with custom data
formats. With standard data formats, the rendering function is called
immediately.
Pasting text using a deferred rendering function
The following example illustrates how to implement a deferred
rendering function.
When the user presses the Copy button, the application clears
the system clipboard to ensure that no data is left over from previous
clipboard operations. The
setDataHandler()
method
then sets the
renderData()
function as the clipboard
renderer.
When the user selects the Paste command from the context menu
of the destination text field, the application accesses the clipboard
and sets the destination text. Since the text data format on the
clipboard has been set with a function rather than a string, the
clipboard calls the
renderData()
function. The
renderData()
function
returns the text in the source text, which is then assigned to the
destination text.
Notice that if you edit the source text before pressing the Paste
button, the edit will be reflected in the pasted text, even when
the edit occurs after the copy button was pressed. This is because
the rendering function doesn’t copy the source text until the paste
button is pressed. (When using deferred rendering in a real application,
you might want to store or protect the source data in some way to
prevent this problem.)
Flash example
package {
import flash.desktop.Clipboard;
import flash.desktop.ClipboardFormats;
import flash.desktop.ClipboardTransferMode;
import flash.display.Sprite;
import flash.text.TextField;
import flash.text.TextFormat;
import flash.text.TextFieldType;
import flash.events.MouseEvent;
import flash.events.Event;
public class DeferredRenderingExample extends Sprite
{
private var sourceTextField:TextField;
private var destination:TextField;
private var copyText:TextField;
public function DeferredRenderingExample():void
{
sourceTextField = createTextField(10, 10, 380, 90);
sourceTextField.text = "Neque porro quisquam est qui dolorem "
+ "ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci velit.";
copyText = createTextField(10, 110, 35, 20);
copyText.htmlText = "<a href='#'>Copy</a>";
copyText.addEventListener(MouseEvent.CLICK, onCopy);
destination = createTextField(10, 145, 380, 90);
destination.addEventListener(Event.PASTE, onPaste);
}
private function createTextField(x:Number, y:Number, width:Number,
height:Number):TextField
{
var newTxt:TextField = new TextField();
newTxt.x = x;
newTxt.y = y;
newTxt.height = height;
newTxt.width = width;
newTxt.border = true;
newTxt.multiline = true;
newTxt.wordWrap = true;
newTxt.type = TextFieldType.INPUT;
addChild(newTxt);
return newTxt;
}
public function onCopy(event:MouseEvent):void
{
Clipboard.generalClipboard.clear();
Clipboard.generalClipboard.setDataHandler(ClipboardFormats.TEXT_FORMAT,
renderData);
}
public function onPaste(event:Event):void
{
sourceTextField.text =
Clipboard.generalClipboard.getData(ClipboardFormats.TEXT_FORMAT).toString;
}
public function renderData():String
{
trace("Rendering data");
var sourceStr:String = sourceTextField.text;
if (sourceTextField.selectionEndIndex >
sourceTextField.selectionBeginIndex)
{
return sourceStr.substring(sourceTextField.selectionBeginIndex,
sourceTextField.selectionEndIndex);
}
else
{
return sourceStr;
}
}
}
}
Flex example
<mx:Application xmlns:mx="http://www.adobe.com/2006/mxml" layout="absolute" width="326" height="330" applicationComplete="init()">
<mx:Script>
<![CDATA[
import flash.desktop.Clipboard;
import flash.desktop.ClipboardFormats;
public function init():void
{
destination.addEventListener("paste", doPaste);
}
public function doCopy():void
{
Clipboard.generalClipboard.clear();
Clipboard.generalClipboard.setDataHandler(ClipboardFormats.TEXT_FORMAT, renderData);
}
public function doPaste(event:Event):void
{
destination.text = Clipboard.generalClipboard.getData(ClipboardFormats.TEXT_FORMAT).toString;
}
public function renderData():String{
trace("Rendering data");
return source.text;
}
]]>
</mx:Script>
<mx:Label x="10" y="10" text="Source"/>
<mx:TextArea id="source" x="10" y="36" width="300" height="100">
<mx:text>Neque porro quisquam est qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci velit.</mx:text>
</mx:TextArea>
<mx:Label x="10" y="181" text="Destination"/>
<mx:TextArea id="destination" x="12" y="207" width="300" height="100"/>
<mx:Button click="doCopy();" x="91" y="156" label="Copy"/>
</mx:Application>
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