CopyTranslator is a small, independent software publisher whose single flagship utility has quietly become indispensable to students, researchers, and professionals who read foreign-language PDFs on Windows desktops. The eponymous CopyTranslator application sits in the system tray, monitors the clipboard, and instantly translates any text the user highlights and copies; its core trick is to strip the hard line breaks that plague multi-column journal articles, letting neural translation engines work on clean, continuous sentences instead of fragments. Beyond this auto-formatting, the program bundles parallel original-and-translation panes, pop-up dictionary lookups, incremental translation history, and one-click phonetic playback, making it equally useful for skimming reference papers, deciphering patents, or batch-converting long bibliographies for literature reviews. Because it relies on open-source translation back-ends such as Google, DeepL, and Yandex, users can switch providers according to language pair or privacy preference, while offline dictionary packs keep basic functionality alive without an internet connection. Lightweight, portable, and MIT-licensed, CopyTranslator has spawned an active GitHub community that contributes new interface languages, academic citation templates, and regex filters for discipline-specific jargon. The publisher’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources like winget, always install the latest release, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.
A user-frandly translation tool for PDF reading. It automaticly removes line breaks from the text you copied and then display the translation result.
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