For plain text, most mobiles support cut/copy/paste and backspace through native means, ~~however in the absence of a physical keyboard or direct access to the clipboard (for security reasons) this doesn't work with focusable nodes~~ however we don't show a native selection when focusable nodes are selected. We should provide adequate editing capabilities via a sensible touch interface.
There are two approaches one could take (or some combination of the two)
==Provide cut/copy/paste tools==
**Pros**
* Users are already familiar with these tools, can achieve any moving/removing/duplication task through some combination of these
* Writing to the system clipboard is possible
**Cons**
* ~~In order to paste anywhere, we would need to add a paste button to the toolbar (which is already crammed) or have via some less-discoverable technique.~~
** All mobile devices have a native paste feature, we should assume that editors know about this.
* ~~May need to add 'delete' as a fourth option if people aren't comfortable using 'cut' for that purpose.~~
** This was added back in T62110
* Moving of block elements is less intuitive and does't show you valid 'drop' points
* ~~'Copy' and 'cut' are misleading in that they doesn't write to the **system** clipboard as well.~~
==Provide move/remove/duplicate tools==
**Pros**
* Also can perform any combination of move/remove/duplicate.
* A move tool could be intuitive to use on a touch device and could show 'drop' points
* Duplication is a one-click process
* ~~Clearer that the system clipboard is not involved~~
**Cons**
* Users may be expecting cut/copy/paste terminology.
* Doesn't write to the system clipboard
* More complex to implement