Copy your text
Use your clipboard as the source for notes, messages, prompts, commands, or form text.
macOS menu bar utility
ClipTyper turns clipboard text into deliberate, human-paced keystrokes so demos, screen shares, forms, and paste-resistant fields feel controlled instead of clumsy.
The problem
During screen sharing, live demos, remote sessions, or structured forms, a sudden wall of pasted text can look abrupt, fail silently, or get blocked by the target app. Re-typing manually gives you control, but it wastes time and introduces mistakes.
Workflow
Use your clipboard as the source for notes, messages, prompts, commands, or form text.
Click into the app or field where the text should appear during your demo or workflow.
ClipTyper emits keystrokes with natural timing, punctuation pauses, and optional corrections.
Hit Escape to cancel a typing run at any moment. You stay in charge from start to finish.
Features
Sends text as keyboard events instead of inserting it directly through a paste command.
Choose careful, natural, quick, or custom timing with variation between characters.
Optional typo-and-correct behavior makes long text feel less robotic in live contexts.
Cancel active typing immediately when the context changes or you spot a mistake.
Clipboard text is processed on your Mac. Evolute LLC does not receive clipboard contents.
Built-in Accessibility status and diagnostics help you understand what macOS allows.
Use cases
Introduce prepared snippets without breaking the flow of the conversation.
Make text appear gradually enough for viewers to follow what is happening.
Use keyboard-style entry in places where direct paste may be awkward or unavailable.
Type repeatable responses, commands, and checklists with less manual effort.
Simple pricing
ClipTyper includes five free typing runs. The full version unlocks unlimited typing through a one-time App Store purchase.
Then unlock unlimited natural typing with a one-time purchase.
Get launch updatesFAQ
No. Clipboard text is read for the typing run and processed locally on your Mac.
macOS requires Accessibility permission before apps can emit keystrokes into other apps.
Most normal text fields can receive keyboard events, but secure fields and protected apps may block synthetic input.
ClipTyper for macOS