One can take a screen shot of a part of the screen on a Mac with Cmd + Shift + 4.
Is there a similar functionality in Windows 7?
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One can take a screen shot of a part of the screen on a Mac with Cmd + Shift + 4. Is there a similar functionality in Windows 7? |
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You can take a screenshot of the active window with Alt+PrintScreen. Also, the included Snipping Tool* ( If you are fond of the Ctrl+Shift+4 keyboard shortcut, you can set a shortcut key (
*Not included with Windows 7 Starter or Home Basic. |
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GreenshotIf you have ever heard of or used SnagIt, it is a program that will allow you to take partial screenshots of your screen. The best and free alternative that I found for home use is Greenshot. Pretty lightweight and awesome program. Cool thing is that you can also use it as an editor and draw arrows and whatnot on it.
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The Snipping Tool in Windows 7 lets you do this, but there isn't a keyboard command for specifically doing a partial screenshot. You'll have to use your mouse to capture your screenshot. When you launch the program it brings up this little screen:
which will automatically dim your screen so you can draw your (rectangular) box around what you want to capture. Under the "New" menu, you have the option of switching among the various screenshot methods:
After you snip, you can annotate it with a pen (you can choose among various colors, thicknesses, or tips) or highlight items:
Whether you annotate or not, you can save the image, e-mail it, or copy it to your clipboard. The Snipping Tool also includes with some configuration options:
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Not really, but there are a couple options:
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If you have OneNote running in the background (SideNote?) then screen clipping for partials is as easy as:
See: Introduction to OneNote Tips (plus Screen Clipping tip) - OneNote Tips & Tricks |
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Alt+Print Screen is the built-in method to capture the active window, and there are several alternatives (free and paid), but under Windows 7, most suffer from an important shortcoming: the Aero window frame (the semitransparent titlebar and borders) is polluted with whatever you happened to have behind the window when you took the screenshot. That's why my favorite screenshot tool is Window Clippings, which captures Aero window screenshots as PNGs with full alpha channels – full semitransparency and window shadow effects are preserved. Compare: That window is in the exact same position over my desktop; the one on the left was taken with Alt+Print Screen and the on the right with Window Clippings. |
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I was satisfied with FastStone Screen Capture which can capture
If you need it, it is possible to customize the keyboard shortcuts. |
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If you have the Windows Evernote client installed (requires Evernote account) that can take a partial screenshot to a new note with the Windows + Print Screen keys. |
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If you're on Windows, then as noted, you can simply use Alt+PrtScr. But even though this is all you need 99% of the time, Windows' built-in print screen feature does have some limitations. E.g.
I've yet to find a screencap tool without the first limitation (though I've only tried open source tools like ZScreen and Greenshot), but EVGA Precision supposedly can allow you to take screenshots in OpenGL games; it's not specifically a screen capture tool, but is still used by lots of people for game screenshots apparently. Note: with either ZScreen or Greenshots, after I posted a bug report, a developer uploaded a patched alpha that I recall was able to capture the full window even if it extended outside of the visible screen area. However, it still cut off parts of the window if it exceeded your maximum resolution. |
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