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For the Wikipedia page, see Wikipedia:Software screenshots.
This is an example screenshot (or screen capture) showing the KDE desktop with several windows and applications opened.
A screenshot, screen capture, or screen dump is an image taken by the computer to record the visible items displayed on the monitor or another visual output device. Usually this is a digital image taken by the host operating system or software running on the computer device, but it can also be a capture made by a camera or a device intercepting the video output of the computer. Screenshots, screen dumps, or screen captures can be used to demonstrate a program, a particular problem a user might be having or generally when computer output needs to be shown to others or archived. All three terms are often used interchangeably; however, some people distinguish between them as follows:
Game screenshotsScreenshots are used on packaging video games. Throughout the history of screenshots, there have been some deceptive practices, such as using a screenshot from a computer platform with better graphics.citation needed Due to complaints by consumers, software companies began putting captions below games such as "Screenshot from Amiga version" or "Actual C64 screenshot".citation needed In the 1990s, when pre-rendered or filmed videos became a part of intermissions in games, some game boxes included screenshots from the in-game videos, which deceived potential buyers about overall game play.citation needed Internet usesIt has become popular in the internet fandom culture to use screencaps of movies and television shows in the creation of fanart, most commonly as icons for LiveJournal, MSN Messenger, and Internet forums about those topics. Websites and various communities have been created to distribute these screencaps. Built-in screenshot functionalityMicrosoft WindowsOn Microsoft Windows, pressing the Print Screen key captures a screenshot of the entire desktop area, and places it in the clipboard. Pressing the combination of Alt-Print Screen captures only the current active window. However, by first pressing Alt, then the hotkey of the dropdown menu you wish to illustrate, you can capture dropdown menu contents. In most versions of Windows, screenshots captured this way do not include the mouse pointer. Video content in programs using a hardware overlay video renderer is not captured by the method described above.citation needed Windows Media Player on Windows XP in its default configuration on supported hardware is affected by this. However, some third-party applications can capture overlay images. By default, Windows does not save the screenshot to an image file; the user is required to paste the image into a separate imaging program (such as Microsoft Paint which is built-in) for saving. Some programs, however, particularly multiplayer online games, will automatically save screenshots in a specified folder. As of Windows XP, it is no longer possible to take screenshots of full-screen DOS windows without other software. Windows Vista includes a utility called Snipping Tool, first introduced in Windows XP Tablet PC Edition. It is a screen-capture tool, that allows for taking screenshots (called snips) of windows, rectangular areas, or a free-form area. Snips can then be annotated, saved as an image file or as an HTML page, or emailed. For programmatic access, application developers can use GDI, DirectX or the Windows Media Encoder API to capture the screen.citation needed Mac OS XOn Mac OS X, pressing Command-Shift-3 takes a screenshot of the entire screen, and Command-Shift-4 takes a screenshot of a chosen area of the screen or if you press Space afterwards you can choose a window on the screen to individually screenshot. These images are saved to the desktop, but if you hold down the control key with the rest of the keyboard shortcut, the pictures are copied to the clipboard instead. These shortcuts also work in Mac OS Classic. You can also use the Grab application to take screenshots. A shell utility called "screencapture" (located in Microsoft Windows XP in Mac OS X If you are running a Win XP on Mac OS X then press Shift+Fn+F11 or Shift+Fn+Alt+F11 to take a screen capture. Like in Mac OS X you don't have an option of taking the desired screen capture of your choice. iPhoneA screen shot can be taken with the iPhone and iPod Touch by pressing and holding the Home button, then pressing the Sleep/Wake button. The screen will flash and the picture will be stored in the camera roll. From there you can sync it to your computer. You can take a screen shot within any application. The screen shot feature is only available with the 2.0 software update. X Window System
gnome-screenshot in Ubuntu
Since X Window System itself is not a desktop environment and only includes a very basic set of programs, methods of taking screenshots vary greatly on the platform. While xwd(1) is the closest "standard" way to do it in the X Window System, most people use other bundled utilities to achieve the task due to their ease of use.
Video screen capturesMost of the major operating systems have no built-in mechanisms to record videos of the screen (recording how the user moves his mouse around, clicks icons, types text etc. as a movie). Systems like Debian’s ones include programs like recordmydesktop and its wrappers (records into Theora, istanbul (also supports Theora), and byzanz (GIF). For others, that and a multitude of other utilities have come up to fill this void, such as SnapZ Pro X on Mac OS X, and Windows Media Encoder on Windows XP. Third party screenshot softwareThere are many third-party programs available on different platforms to take screenshots with advanced functionality. Some computer graphics software can acquire screenshots. Typically, these programs can be configured to include or exclude the mouse pointer, automatically crop out everything but the client area of the active window, take timed shots, areas of the screen not visible on the monitor (autoscroll), capture the content of overlays and so on. Examples include: Common technical issuesHardware overlaysOn Windows systems, screenshots of games and media players sometimes fail, resulting in a blank rectangle. The reason for this is that the graphics are bypassing the normal screen and going to a high-speed graphics processor on the graphics card by using a method called hardware overlay. Generally, there is no way to extract a computed image back out of the graphics card, though software may exist for special cases or specific video cards. One way these images can be captured is to turn off the hardware overlay. Because many computers have no hardware overlay, most programs are built to work without it, just a little slower. In Windows XP, this is disabled by opening the Display Properties menu, clicking on the "Settings" tab, clicking, "Advanced", "Troubleshoot", and moving the Hardware Acceleration Slider to "None." DVDs are often encrypted using a patented algorithm called Content-scrambling system or CSS, making it much more difficult to take screenshots of them. Many DVD-capable media players will only play them on the overlay layer, where they cannot be captured. Mac OS X DVD player deactivates the built-in screenshot feature, but it is still possible to capture the image or the video with third party software. Screen recordingThe screen recording capability of some screen capture programs is a time-saving way to create instructions and presentations, but the resulting files are often large. A common problem with video recordings is the action jumps, instead of flowing smoothly, due to low frame rate. Though getting faster all the time, ordinary PCs are not yet fast enough to play videos and simultaneously capture them at professional frame rates, i.e. 30 frame/s. For many cases, high frame rates are not required. This is not generally an issue if simply capturing desktop video, which requires far less processing power than video playback, and it is very possible to capture at 30 frame/s. This of course varies depending on desktop resolution, processing requirements needed for the application that is being captured, and many other factors. Copyright issuesSome companies believe the use of screenshots is an infringement of copyright on their program, as it is a derivative work of the widgets and other art created for the software.12 Regardless of copyright, screenshots may still be legally used under the principle of fair use in the U.S. or fair dealing and similar laws in other countries.34 Preventing copying is one of the issues that Trusted Computing seeks to address. Under Trusted Computing, the user would be prevented from taking screenshots when certain programs are running, regardless of the wishes of the computer's owner. See alsoReferences
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