On the Mac, how can I take a screen shot of a window that includes the parts that are off-screen and need scrolling to become visible? The built-in Grab application can capture individual windows, but it only includes the parts that are on-screen at the moment. Clarification: By 'off-screen' I mean parts that are in the window, but are not visible, because the window has scrollbars.
I do not mean parts of the window that are simply off-screen because of how the window is positioned (of course, I want those, too). Closed as off-topic by ♦ Aug 9 '14 at 7:38 This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:.
'Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. On how to properly ask this type of question.' – Mokubai If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the, please.
- In this tutorial, learn how to download and install Cute CUT for PC (Windows 10/8/7 and Mac OS) for free. Cute CUT is a very user-friendly video editing and movie making app. With the help of this tool, you can draw directly on movie, add a soundtrack make them more interesting.
- Actually there are many Snipping Tool alternative on Mac, such as the built-in Grab for Mac, it can be used to take screenshots on Mac, but it can automatically save screenshot in TIFF format. You need to use the 'Preview' app to change the format.
While can take a picture of an entire web page, and can capture every element on your screen (including stuff that’s hidden by other windows in front of it)—it’s unlikely you will find an application that can take a picture of the off-screen regions of a window. The reason is that many applications don’t draw the off-screen portion until it’s needed. Often that part of the display isn’t even rendered until you scroll it into view. So a theoretical “whole window” snapper would capture a lot of blank or undefined areas. The question was not only about browsers (though, in the comments the questioner indeed indicated that's all that's needed). Most normal windows don't have a print option, hence no Save as PDF either. For browsers, even when there's a CSS for media='print' then a PDF (at least one created in Safari or OmniWeb on a Mac) has the additional advantage that links remain clickable.
A disadvantage -for some usage- will be the pagination though. Saving an image from a PDF often only yields an image of one specific page, not of the whole document. – Sep 12 '09 at 12:02.
Off-topic: Snip For Mac Free
Currently, the Mac OS X version of BYOND (like the Linux version) is text-only. Most BYOND games are graphical, so you won't be able to play them using the Mac OS X version. If you want to play graphical BYOND games on a Mac, what you could do is run the Windows version of BYOND under Mac OS X by using an 'emulator'.