61

I am creating a Beta Testers reporting module so they can send in thier comments on my software, but I would like to have the option to include a screenshot with the report. How do I take a screenshot of the screen with Python on Windows? I have found several examples on Linux, but haven't had much luck on Windows.

1

9 Answers 9

51

Another approach that is really fast is the MSS module. It is different from other solutions in the way that it uses only the ctypes standard module, so it does not require big dependencies. It is OS independant and its use is made easy:

from mss import mss

with mss() as sct:
    sct.shot()

And just find the screenshot.png file containing the screen shot of the first monitor. There are a lot of possibile customizations, you can play with ScreenShot objects and OpenCV/Numpy/PIL/etc..

7
31

Worth noting that ImageGrab only works on MSWindows.

For cross platform compatibility, a person may be best off with using the wxPython library. http://wiki.wxpython.org/WorkingWithImages#A_Flexible_Screen_Capture_App

import wx
app = wx.App()  # Need to create an App instance before doing anything
screen = wx.ScreenDC()
size = screen.GetSize()
bmp = wx.Bitmap(size[0], size[1])
mem = wx.MemoryDC(bmp)
mem.Blit(0, 0, size[0], size[1], screen, 0, 0)
del mem  # Release bitmap
bmp.SaveFile('screenshot.png', wx.BITMAP_TYPE_PNG)
7
  • AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'App' Commented Dec 28, 2013 at 11:53
  • 6
    app = wx.App() otherwise you might get: wx._core.PyNoAppError: The wx.App object must be created first! Also, download wxPython from here: wxpython.org/download.php For some reason it's not the same "wx" if you just do "pip install wx"
    – cSn
    Commented Jan 30, 2014 at 14:26
  • CLI windows coming out empty
    – olekb
    Commented Sep 15, 2017 at 13:46
  • 2
    @Sepero: How would you get multiple monitors? Commented Dec 7, 2017 at 15:25
  • 1
    @ChristianAdam: your must pip install -U wxPython
    – V15I0N
    Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 20:30
16

You can use the ImageGrab module. ImageGrab works on Windows and macOS, and you need PIL (Pillow) to use it. Here is a little example:

from PIL import ImageGrab
snapshot = ImageGrab.grab()
save_path = "C:\\Users\\YourUser\\Desktop\\MySnapshot.jpg"
snapshot.save(save_path)
11

For pyautogui users:

import pyautogui
screenshot = pyautogui.screenshot()
4
  • And how do I write the image into pgn file? Commented Jun 26, 2018 at 13:17
  • 7
    pyautogui.screenshot('filename.png') Commented Jul 19, 2018 at 0:31
  • the result size of image with PIL is better than above module: from PIL import ImageGrab snapshot = ImageGrab.grab() save_path = r"E:\havaee\mypic.jpg" snapshot.save(save_path)
    – ali reza
    Commented Jun 4, 2019 at 3:13
  • @alireza pyautogui (currently) uses PIL under the hood.
    – Trang Oul
    Commented Apr 4 at 13:31
5

A simple way to take a screenshot is through Pygame.

 pygame.image.save(Surface, filename)

Where 'Surface' is the surface you are taking a screenshot of, and 'filename' is the file path, name, and type where you save thew image.

You can export as BMP, TGA, PNG, or JPEG. As of Pygame 1.8, PNG, and JPEG also work.

If no file extension is specified it will default to a .TGA file.

You can even use the 'os' library for saving to specific file directories.

An example:

import os
import pygame
surface = pygame.display.set_mode((100, 100), 0, 32)
surface.fill((255, 255, 255))
pygame.draw.circle(surface, (0, 0, 0), (10, 10), 15, 0)
pygame.display.update()
pygame.image.save(surface, os.path.expanduser("~/Desktop/pic.png"))

This saves anything on the 'surface' Surface to the user's desktop as pic.png

2
  • Two questions: 1. Is pygame platform-independent? 2. Can you get a multiple-monitor screenshot? Commented Dec 7, 2017 at 15:19
  • 2
    As far as I know, Pygame is platform is independent. This code will only screenshot the pygame screen, and only the pygame screen. If your screen spans across 2 monitors, i would think that it would be able to (though I am unable to test this). Hope this helps! Commented Dec 8, 2017 at 5:43
1

If you want to snap particular running Windows app you’ll have to acquire a handle by looping over all open windows in your system.

It’s easier if you can open this app from Python script. Then you can convert process pid into window handle.

Another challenge is to snap the app that runs in particular monitor. I have 3 monitor system and I had to figure out how to snap display 2 and 3.

This example will take multiple application snapshots and save them into JPEG files.

import wx

print(wx.version())
app=wx.App()  # Need to create an App instance before doing anything
dc=wx.Display.GetCount()
print(dc)
#e(0)
displays = (wx.Display(i) for i in range(wx.Display.GetCount()))
sizes = [display.GetGeometry().GetSize() for display in displays]

for (i,s) in enumerate(sizes):
    print("Monitor{} size is {}".format(i,s))   
screen = wx.ScreenDC()
#pprint(dir(screen))
size = screen.GetSize()

print("Width = {}".format(size[0]))
print("Heigh = {}".format(size[1]))

width=size[0]
height=size[1]
x,y,w,h =putty_rect

bmp = wx.Bitmap(w,h)
mem = wx.MemoryDC(bmp)

for i in range(98):
    if 1:
        #1-st display:

        #pprint(putty_rect)
        #e(0)

        mem.Blit(-x,-y,w+x,h+y, screen, 0,0)

    if 0:
        #2-nd display:
        mem.Blit(0, 0, x,y, screen, width,0)
    #e(0)

    if 0:
        #3-rd display:
        mem.Blit(0, 0, width, height, screen, width*2,0)

    bmp.SaveFile(os.path.join(home,"image_%s.jpg" % i), wx.BITMAP_TYPE_JPEG)    
    print (i)
    sleep(0.2)
del mem

Details are here

0
0

First of all, install PrtSc Library using pip3.

 import PrtSc.PrtSc as Screen
 screenshot=PrtSc.PrtSc(True,'filename.png')
0

I struggled with a few python screenshot issues, and so far using shot-scraper has given the best results.

pip install shot-scraper

Then install Playwright

shot-scraper install

Take a screenshot:

shot-scraper <URL>

Details and the code in GitHub repository here.

0

another solution is use PowerShell script as PowerShell related to windows , so you can run the PowerShell script from python:

this answer from rogerdpack

PowerShell to take screenshoot and save it within provided path

[Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("System.Drawing")
function screenshot([Drawing.Rectangle]$bounds, $path) {
   $bmp = New-Object Drawing.Bitmap $bounds.width, $bounds.height
   $graphics = [Drawing.Graphics]::FromImage($bmp)
   
   $graphics.CopyFromScreen($bounds.Location, [Drawing.Point]::Empty, $bounds.size)
   
   $bmp.Save($path)
   
   $graphics.Dispose()
   $bmp.Dispose()
}

$bounds = [Drawing.Rectangle]::FromLTRB(0, 0, 1000, 900)
screenshot $bounds "C:\screenshot.png" # change path to somewhere writable

please note PowerShell execution will be disabled by default so you can enable it by using this line from PowerShell (make sure to back it disabled again after finish for security (usually this for execute ps file)

Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned

this python code to run powershell script from python

completed = subprocess.run(["powershell", "here add the previous powershell script that will take screenshot", cmd], capture_output=True)
# do something if success or failed
if completed.returncode != 0:
    print("An error occured: %s", hello_info.stderr)
else:
    print("Hello command executed successfully!")

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.