What are some good screenshot programs for Windows, preferably free? Obviously I know I can hit the Print Screen key and paste that into Paint and save it, but I'm looking for something that makes it simple. Bonus points if it can automatically upload to an image host.
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The built-in Vista / Windows 7 Snipping Tool does a fantastic job. Not sure if you can get it to work on earlier versions of Windows. | |||||||||
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FreeGeneric
Special features (video, web-upload, etc.)
Paid
For more detailed info, you can also reference the Wikipedia article on screenshots. | ||||
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I really like Greenshot. You can take a screenshot of a selected area or a single window, and you can configure it to either copy to the clipboard, save to a file, open in a simple editor, or any combination of the three. The only problem with it is that I have very occasionally had it crash, but restarting the program fixes it. I've also used Cropper which I also like, but it runs a little slower and has less configurability than Greenshot. | ||||
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+1 for Cropper. Free, Lightweight, Open Source, Written in C#.
It also has a strong plugin community! Here is a list of some of the free plugins for Cropper:
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Take a look at www.jingproject.com. I think it should do all you need. | ||||
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Per Scott Hanselman:
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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I use the Print Screen key and Adobe Photoshop. Alt+Print Screen captures only the active window. | ||||
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Cropper is pretty nice. | ||||
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On Windows, I now use Screenshot Captor. It may not be the best looking tool, but it has a nice set of options for selecting exactly which part of the screen to grab (entire screen, current window, a custom selection, etc.). For the bonus points: Screenshot Captor can be configured to easily upload the picture to an FTP server, or send it via e-mail. | ||||
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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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Another good one for Windows is FastStone Screen Capture. It's not free, but inexpensive at $20. | ||||
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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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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 snagit, not free but worth the money. You can tell it to just take a shot of the selction, or the whole page, it even scroll a page for you if it is longer than your screen. it also has ftp upload functions and other useful stuff. | ||||
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I use Bug Shooting. It can send screenshots to:
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When looking for utilities, I will often check Scott Hanselman's tool list first. He suggests WinSnap or Window Clippings. | ||||
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FastStone capture. Version 5.3 is free: http://www.oldapps.com/fast_stone_capture.php :-) Latest version is free for non-commercial use, but I think its lifetime license is worth few bucks. It can take a screenshot of entire window (even parts which are non-visible, and needs scrolling). It also has nice simple editor for adding highlights, texts, ... It has cropping, various edges, ... Latest versions even have screen recording tool included for making simple videos. | ||||
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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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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'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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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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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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Personally I used IrfanView, though admittedly the screen capturing capability is sort of a "hidden feature" as it was snuck away in the "Option" menu (find it under "Option > Capture/Screenshot..."; alternatively the shortcut key is "C"). | ||||
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If you just want to capture web pages the add on "Screengrab!" will take the entire websites length and width in one screenshot for you. | ||||
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I use Gadwin PrintScreen. It is small, it is easy to use and it's free. | ||||
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Did you know you can press ALT + PRTSCRN to copy just the current window to the clipboard? I use this all the time in combination with Paint.Net. | ||||
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I've been using MWSnap for a while. Not sure if it's the best but it has many good features like only grabbing a section of the screen or grabbing the selected window/toolbar. | ||||
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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:
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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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protected by Diago Jan 30 '11 at 20:50
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