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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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FREE

On Windows, you can hit ALT-PrtScr (capture the current window) or just PrtScr (capture the entire screen) and this will copy that image to the clipboard, after which you can paste it into any image program like Photoshop or even Paint (Start->Run->"mspaint").

On Vista, you can use the included Snipping Tool. akmad
PrtScr, another free option can also capture overlay windows, which Snipping Tool cannot.

Cropper, is a free open source .NET screen capture tool written in C#.

SnagIt's free cousin, Jing works on Mac and Windows and will also capture video. John Sheehan

Bug Shooting is a useful free tool, especially if you use FogBugz, Gemini, BugTacker, or OnTime.

Firefox has an add-on called Screengrab sparkes and also Fireshot.
Abduction is another Firefox add-on for capturing long web pages as one single image. Ross

MWSnap. It's getting on in years, but still gets the job done with a fairly nice array of features. Still the screen capture tool I used the most.

On a Mac, screenshot taking is built in. Press Command-Shift-4. The image will be saved as a PNG on the desktop. (more info)

PAID

SnagIt from TechSmith is $50, and is a good choice for Windows. It's written in Delphi. David in Dakota

  • It has an image editor so it's nice if you need to annotate / mark the screen grabs that you take.
  • 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.
  • It does delayed capture which is useful for getting context menus etc as a part of your screen grabs.
  • It can screen grab scrolling windows which is very handy.
  • It has outputs so you can send images to Flickr, Blogger, MSExcel, Skype, FogBugz, etc.

WindowClippings is $18 and will grab a shot of a window without any background and also add a watermark.

WinSnap is ~$25 and allows you to simultaneously select and capture multiple objects (e.g. windows, dialogs, buttons and controls).

FastStone Capture is ~$20 and has a few nice image editing tools.

FreshLog is ~$15 and will import to almost any issue tracker.


For more detailed info, you can also reference the Wikipedia article on screenshots.

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If you need something that will work well with web browsers, i.e. support scrollbars and work fast, try BrowserSeal

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recommed PCHand Screen Capture, it could help u capture anything on the screen. http://www.screen-capture-record.com/

if u wanna some free one, read this article: blog.pc-hand.com/news/free-screen-capture-tools.html

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u could use prntscr key on ur keyboard, press the prntscr or CTRL+prntscr, the screenshot goes to your PAM automatically. then goto MS Paint,MS word or any other graphic editors and paste it immediately, and then save the screenshot as ur wish… if u wanna capture anything on the screen, perhaps this key can't help u. Im using PCHand Screen Capture, it could help u capture any screenshot on the screen. i think it is pretty good, i know it from my friend, it has a free trial version, u can also try it.Hope it could help. http://www.screen-capture-record.com/

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I like Lightscreen. An open source windows tool.

Screenshots + descriptions of many of the tools mentioned here available: LifeHacker - Five Best Screen Capture Tool.

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I have come to love GADWIN PrintScreen 4.4 its unintrusive, free and has many nice little features. Gadwin Printscreen Link

Really everything you could want...

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Check out Gadwin PrintScreen. It's feature rich and free. It's the only tool I've used for capturing screen shots for a long time.

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DemoCreator is a screen recording application. It records the onscreen activity but also enable users to export any frame of the recording as an image.

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Use GrabUp. It's amazing tool. It's available in both windows and mac.

www.grabup.com

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If you use PaintShop Pro, its screenshot taking capabilities are just fine.

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HyperSnap ($35) is my favorite

http://www.hyperionics.com/

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Another good one for Windows is FastStone Screen Capture. It's not free, but inexpensive at $20.

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Try VVCap. It can be used as old school grab-into-clipboard, but it also lets you instantly post screenshot to web. The latter feature is great if you are using instant messaging of any kind and want to illustrate your messages with some sort of screenshots, since you can instantly post and send URL

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I've tried many different tools, and SnagIt was by far the best. Here's another vote for SnagIt!

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I use gimp which has a screenshot grabber built in.

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if you are using GNOME in linux, and the built-in screen grabber isn't doing it for you, try gtk-recordmydesktop

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If you're using Windows, ClipMate is very good. It is commercial, starting at $34.95, but you can take full screen, active window and selected screen area captures. Plus it's not just for taking screen shots, it can manage your clipboard too.

I tend to use it for writing documentation. You can create folders within it and do screen captures to them and store various bits of related text, which you can then refer to later.

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I never understood why people need anything but the built-in screenshot functionality in Windows/OS X/Gnome/KDE (although I've never actually used KDE for any length of time)

Well, on Windows perhaps it skips the prnt-screen/switch-to-image-editor/paste/save steps.. but OS X's screenshot shortcuts are great. Cmd+shift+3 grabs the entire screen. Cmd+Shift+4 lets you screenshot an area (or my favourite feature, press space and it lets you select a specific window, or the dock/menubar etc). It saves it to your desktop.

With "Deeper" or "Onyx" or any of the countless system-setting-tweaking-tools, you can change the location of the screenshots (I put min in ~/Pictures/Screenshots/), the format it saves in (I don't recall the default, but I have it set to save PNG)

In Gnome, you hit prnt-scrn, it asks you where to save the file. That's about it..

On Windows, I just pressed prnt-scrn, loaded up Paint Shop Pro 6 (v7 started to load really slowly, PSP6 loads in a second or two), or Paint, paste, then save..

To this point, I cannot fathom why people pay money for this functionality.. What do these applications achieve over the boring little button already on your keyboard?

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I've recently become a fan of Greenshot. It is open source and written on the .NET Framework. I usually configure mine to just put the screenshot on the clipboard, but it also has a built-in image viewer when the screenshot is taken.

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SnagIt is fantastic. The scrolling window option is amazing.

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If you're using Windows and have OneNote installed, Windows Key + S allows you to take/crop a screenshot. I've found it incredibly useful.

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Fireshot is an amazing add-on for Firefox (and IE).

Among other features:

  • It can capture whole page/area (including flash)
  • It can crop/edit/highlight/add text/annotate
  • It can email capture, or upload directly to an Image host (see example below)

Fireshot

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I am also using Screenshot Captor. It is light, fast, have plenty of options to configure the screenshot you want and the image quality is very good. One nice feature I don't see in other screenshot app is the ability to capture one whole, long web page in a single grab. No need to use photoshop to stitch different grab.

The only thing I don't like about it is the not so beautiful interface, like the snazzy looking Cropper.

On Firefox, I will just use Screengrab.

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I've found that using the snipping tool in Vista combined with Outlook/Word is incredibly fast and easy. I habitually take screenshots for clients and add a drop shadow and resize in Outlook.

I can't tell you how many times a day I do this:

winkey -> "snip" -> [enter] -> choose snipping area -> alt+tab to email -->
ctrl+v -> apply drop shadow -> resize -> done!
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+1 for Cropper. Free, Lightweight, Open Source, Written in C#.

alt text

It also has a strong plugin community! Here is a list of some of the free plugins for Cropper:

  1. AnimatedGif - Captures to an animated GIF image.
  2. AviFormat - Captures to an AVI movie.
  3. CountdownPng - Gives you a countdown before taking the shot to allow you to set it up.
  4. SendToEmail - Sends the image via the default e-mail client.
  5. SendToFlickr - Sends captures to one's Flickr account
  6. SendToOneNote - Sends captures to a page in OneNote
  7. SendToS3 - Sends captures to one's Amazon S3 account
  8. SendToTinyPic - Sends captures to TinyPic
  9. TFSWorkItem - Creates a Team Foundation Server work item with the captures image as an attachment.
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I havent's seen this one mentionned, so here we go: MWSnap (old, but very reliable) free, but not open source. PrtScr is gorgeous but tend to crash very often on my primary computer.

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The free version of Evernote has a built-in screen capture tool. Also, you could get a free version of Snagit 7. You just had to download it and register for a license. I'm not sure this is still available.

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For the Mac, aside from the usual [meta-]shift-cmd-3/4 keyboard shortcuts, there's a bundled utility called Grab that can help. Grab might be easier to remember and find (just press cmd-space and write "grab" into Spotlight) and it also has timed screenshots, which you can't achieve with the shortcuts.

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On a Mac they're all built in:

alt text

At work I use Hypersnap, which provides pretty much the same features (along with some more advanced ones) for Windows - A free trial is available, but the full version costs about $35.

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I'll go with Ross and recommend Abduction. It lets you capture an entire web page, no matter how long it is, as a single image.

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