![]() ![]() reg file on the install disc that you could simply double-click. You can easily fix this by modifying the Windows registry. Of course, none of this stops Photoshop from sticking its own copied data into the system clipboard, which works 100% of the time. Purging Photoshop’s clipboard doesn’t help it only gives you a blank clipboard that still won’t update. It then, for whatever reason, decides that the clipboard data hasn’t changed, so why bother updating its own clipboard with redundant data? ![]() Contrary to any logical reason I could think of, Photoshop keeps its own clipboard data separate from the system clipboard, and monitors the system clipboard for changes. This problem is likely a legacy from when computers were slow and didn’t have much memory (like artists flattening images to make file size smaller, but that’s a discussion for another day). What do these situations have in common (other than being annoying)? They’re all instances of Photoshop’s clipboard thinking it’s smarter than you. Situation #3: You are working in Photoshop, and try to paste an image from any external program, and end up getting something you copied in Photoshop earlier. Situation #2: You copy an image to the clipboard from your browser, paste it into Photoshop, and all subsequent paste operations from your browser result in the same damn image. Suddenly, you keep getting the same image when you paste, despite taking updated screenshots. Situation #1: You are taking a series of screenshots and pasting them into Photoshop. ![]()
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