Skip to content
Ditto Clipboard Manager

Photo via Pexels

Tool

Edited by Alex Surfaced·Productivity·2 min read
Share:

Ditto Clipboard Manager is a robust, open-source extension for the standard Windows clipboard, created by Shannon L. Montgomery, designed to save multiple text, images, and HTML items copied to the clipboard. The primary workflow involves copying content as usual, then pressing a customizable hotkey to bring up a searchable list of past clippings, which can be pasted with a click or hotkey. This feature-rich tool is available solely for Windows operating systems, providing persistent storage beyond typical session limits. Its most impactful feature is the ability to store an unlimited number of items, making it indispensable for knowledge workers. Data is stored locally in an encrypted database, ensuring privacy and quick access to historical items without relying on external servers.

Official site linkedUse-case reviewedProductivity

Editorial check

How this page is checked

Official site:ditto-cp.sourceforge.io

Source trail

ditto-cp.sourceforge.io

External links are separated from Surfaced commentary.

Reader safety

Context before clicks

Product links and external services are not presented as guarantees.

Monetization

No affiliate flag

Ads and commerce links are kept distinct from editorial text.

Surfaced take

Why It’s Useful

Ditto solves the pervasive problem of losing valuable copied information when copying something new, drastically improving efficiency in data entry and content creation. For the data analyst who frequently copies numerical sequences, column headers, and query snippets, Ditto allows for effortless recall and reuse without retyping or searching. For the customer support agent, it means quickly inserting common responses, product links, and account information directly into chat windows from a pre-defined list or history. Ditto is completely free and open-source, offering its full, powerful feature set without any cost or limitations, making it incredibly valuable. Compared to the built-in Windows Clipboard History (Win+V), Ditto wins with its advanced search, grouping capabilities, and ability to keep history across reboots, offering a more professional solution. A power feature is the "Quick Paste" option, allowing users to paste a specific item from history using a numbered hotkey, significantly speeding up repetitive tasks. A non-technical user can install Ditto and begin utilizing its core functionality to save and paste history in less than five minutes.

Enjoyed this? Get five picks like this every morning.

Free daily newsletter — zero spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Get the day's top tech discoveries delivered at 6 PM.

Free, source-linked, and easy to unsubscribe from.