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What are the good screenshot taking tools available (open source and commercial)?

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belongs on superuser? – CrazyJugglerDrummer Nov 1 at 14:47
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Hello to you all! I use regularly ScreenHunter free. The only nuisance is the lack of PNG support. Apart from that it's great - offers great capturing tool with zoom and visually different borders, supports auto-naming of the created files, custom key shortcuts.

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Skitch is also popular for mac users

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I'm a huge fan of Jing. Although it doesn't offer very many features, it makes sharing screenshots extremely easy. As soon as you grab a screen capture, it uploads the image to screencast.com, and then copies a link to your clipboard so that you can paste it into an email or instant message.

Alternatively, you can copy the image directly to your clipboard, or you can upload it to an FTP server.

Best of all, its free :-D

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FREE WinSnap is the best.

It is true (as people pointed) winSnap is not free anymore, but you can stil (leagaly) use the free version, you simply don't get updates and it is frozen in time. Just search for winSnap v1.1 (notice not all Google hits are truly 1.1, pay attention).

second runner up is Cropper

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I use ScreenShot Captor (free donationware) on Windows and Skitch on OS X (free public beta).

Screenshot Captor Features:

  • Optimized for taking lots of screenshots with minimal intervention.
  • Smart autonaming of files, and ability to embed textual comments in files.
  • Good multi-monitor support.
  • Highly configurable to make it work the way you want it to; stays out of your way in the system tray.
  • Lots of capture modes: Multimon (multiple monitors), Desktop, Active Window, Region, Windows Object. Each mode has a hotkey for quick access.
  • Unique Cool Effects, including automatic active window enhancement (see pictures below).
  • Unsurpassed support for 3rd party user configurable tools, including file browsers and image editors; extend the program to do whatever you need by interfacing it with other programs.
  • Slimline sidebar file browser provides full shell operations.
  • Optional automatic image file versioning.
  • Automatically finds boundaries of non-rectangular/themed windows.
  • Autoscroll capture for windows too big for screen.
  • Deluxe thumbnail maker.
  • Quick PostCapture PopUp Dialog.
  • Quick Screenshot Emailer Menu.
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I've been using QLiner Hotkeys Screen shot tool/plugin. It allows you to quickly vary the size, gives you a nice grid to get the proper dimensions you're looking at. In addition, you have a great quick launch tool to boot!

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I've always liked the FogBugz Screenshot Tool, mainly for the ability to feed screenshots straight into FogBugz cases.

It also allows saving a screenshot to a file.

For a more full featured tool, Snagit seems to be one of the better choices.

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There is a good clipping utility in Office OneNote. It grabs the portion of screen that you select with your mouse and inserts right below the captured image some info related to the operation. Useful if you use Office, because of the integration of the various tools.

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I like Cropper. Its got some decent plugins, and is an open source .NET app, which I like to support.

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Abduction! is a useful tool for capturing web pages.

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On Windows I always use Cropper, it's free and has a great interface that allows you to select exactly what part of the screen you want to capture and then save it off to a number of different formats.

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Jing is made by the Snag It people, but is just the bare essentials. It has capture of images and short video, easy saving and sharing and basic editing/markup tools. And it's free. It's a really great product.

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Kenny Kerr's Window Clippings for grabbing an entire window, without a background. or Windows Vista's Snipping Tool for quick grabs.

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I'm using PrtScr... it works fine for my needs... can capture square and free-hand portions of the screen... also, it pop ups automatically when you press Print Screen in the keyboard...

PrtScr

(If I had Vista at work, I'd use its snipping tool, which is great)

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Just to add a few more notes on Snagit, which is already mentioned but which has features that propel it far beyond the ALT + PrintScreen:

  1. It has an image editor so it's nice if you need to annotate / mark the screen grabs that you take.

  2. It measures the area you're grabbing in pixels - a lot of web developers in our group use it as a measuring tool, not just a screen shot tool.

  3. It does delayed capture which is useful for getting context menus etc as a part of your screen grabs.

  4. It can screen grab scrolling windows which is very handy.

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What are your needs? If I need a quick one-off of my screen to include in a document I just use Print Screen (Alt-Print Screen to get only the active window) and paste into GIMP to get what I need.

If you need something a little more sophisticated (automated screenshots at set intervals), I've used SnagIt in the past. It works pretty well, but the free version only gives you a limited number of trials (30 if I remember right).

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If you want simple and free give Snippy a shot. http://www.bhelpuri.net/Snippy You can select either a box or a lasso to capture. You can optionally have it give your Screenshot a boarder. Makes it a bit more clean if you are going to put it in an email or word doc.

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I use the Print Screen key and Adobe Photoshop.

Alt+Print Screen captures only the active window.

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If you're running Vista, use the included Snipping Tool. It's free and, for simple usages, works great.

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Here you go.

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I've found myself using ScreenGrab! a firefox plugin a load just recently although generally I use Print Screen/Sys Req under Windows and X and edit the result.

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Per Scott Hanselman:

WinSnap and Window Clippings - I'm torn between two of the finest screenshot utilities I've ever found. Free, clean, fast and tight, WinSnap has as many (or as few) options as you'd like. Also does wonders with rounded corners and transparency. It includes a 32-bit and 64-bit version, as well as a portable no-install version. However, Window Clippings also has no install, includes 32 and 64-bit and is only $10. It's a tough one. I use Window Clippings at least daily, and I use WinSnap a few times a week. Kenny Kerr of Window Clippings is actively adding new features and has a nice clean add-in model on his Developers site. Both these apps are worth your download.

I don't think either of them are free anymore, but they're both nice. Also don't forget the clipping tool in Vista.

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