Technical Article => Operating System => Windows
- Apr 26, 2007 Taking a screenshot of an application is a simple task: the “Print Screen” key can be used alone (to grab the entire screen), or one can use the “Alt + Print Screen” key combination to take a snapshot of only the active window.
- Oct 27, 2018 2) go to File Create Screenshot Menu shown above will be seen Select suitable option Take Full or Partial Screenshot. 3) System will generate a screenshot, which then will be available on the GUI for editing, where you can edit the image, apply effects and share (as needed).
- Tetapi jika OS yang kamu gunakan adalah Windows 10, maka kamu tetap bisa mengambil gambar menu tersebut. Caranya adalah dengan menekan Ctrl+PrtScn. Screenshot Menu Dropdown Di Windows 7. Pada Windows 7, kamu tidak dapat melakukan hal tersebut. Jadi jangan gunakan Snipping Tool untuk menangkap gambar menu dropdown. Ada cara lain yang bisa kamu.
Os X 10.12
May 01, 2015 Run snipping tool ( If screen appears grayed out, press ESC, if not continue step 2.); Click to open the start menu; Hold CTRL and press print Screen.Screen will appear grayed out, ready to capture. NOTE: This will work with all popup menus ie. Windows Menu, Context menu etc.
As a IT professional, we often need to capture screenshot of what we are working on to give proof of what we are doing and why we do it. The screenshot will provide a good sense to other people. You may be familiar with taking screenshot with different tools such as snagit, snipping tool or the Windows PrtSc button. But do you know how to take a screenshot of a dropdown menu?
Here we show you how to capture screeenshot of dropdown menu with the snipping tool provided since Windows 7. https://arabiakeen393.weebly.com/ant-for-mac-os-sierra.html. Below are the steps:
1. Open snipping tool and press Esc
2. Move to the dropdown menu and expand it
3. Then press Ctrl+PrtSc, you will now be able to capture the screenshot of the dropdown menu.
Another workaround is using Paint provided by Windows. Steps are:
1.Open Paint on Windows
2. Move to the dropdown menu and expand it
3. Press Alt+PrtSc and paste it to the Paint
4. Then you can use any screentshot capturing tool or picture cropping tool
RELATED
0 COMMENT
It’s time of yet another show and tell moment. It always interests me to see what people have in their quick-launch tool bar and/or system tray. I know, not all of us use these things. I remember quite a few people in the Show me your desktop thread were using desktop managers that eschew tool bars and trays. We had some users of Awesome, some users of Ratpoison and few others. But if you own a system that does have a quick launch tool bar of sorts, let me know what is in it.
Why do I want to know this? Because it shows me what software you use on your daily basis – what tools do you consider to be so essential they need to be accessible with just one click. For most of my software I use Launchy and Katapult. I hate navigating application menus. But I still keep bunch of apps on the tool bar for an even quicker access:
This is a screen shot from my Kubuntu machine at work. Let’s ignore the K menu which is standard, and the two icons next to it. One expands to a list of frequently used file system locations (home, storage media etx.) the other is a standard KDE “show desktop” icon. These are fairly standard in KDE. The rest of the apps (from left to right, top to bottom) are:
- Kontact – my default email client on that machine
- Terminal – opens a kterm for me – I tend to hit this 10 million times a day on average
- Firefox – first thing I open, last thing I close before logging off (I close it because of memory leaks)
- Kile – LaTex editor. I used to use it a lot when I was in school – I don’t really need it for work, but it’s there
- SmartSVN – it did not have an icon, so I used this squirrelly thing
- Virtual Box – I use it to run a Windows XP copy so that I can test windows specific things on it
- Komodo Edit – my current IDE of choice for PHP
- CrossLoop – remote screen sharing app based on TightVNC I often use to troubleshoot things with coworkers on location. Runs perfectly well under Wine btw.
- Speed Crunch Calculator – just a basic calculator for when I need to crunch some numbers or make a quick dec to hex/binary conversion
- KSnapshot – basic KDE app for taking screenshots
My Windows box at home has a much more minimalistic setup:
- Firefox – as above
- Thunderbird – my primary email client on the windows platform
- µtorrent – it only weighs in at few hundred KB, is full featured and the memory footprint is almost nonexistent – there is just no way you couldn’t love it.
- Foobar 2000 – if I want to listen to music, I use Foobar because it is minimalistic simple and functional
This sort of shows that at home I’m primarily running Firefox. Everything else is secondary. Also, the canonical “Show Desktop” icon is not there because I simply use Win+D for that.
Macos sierra v10 12 16a323 multilingual image for vmware. The system tray is another matter. It shows how many services you are running on your machine. Here is my Kubuntu tray:
This may seem like a lot of stuff but it is not. Almost all of these apps are actually native to KDE and start with my window manager. If you use KDE you should recognize them:
- The flag is the keyboard layout switcher (I frequently switch to Polish Programmer’s layout and back).
- The padlock is the GPG key manager (running because Kontact is using it).
- The standard Network tray icon
- The standard power management icon
- The Korganize notification daemon (part of the Kontact suite)
- The standard volume management icon
- The standard clipboard management icon (aka Klipper)
- The standard bluetooth management icon
- The standard Kmail icon (shows a number of unread emails)
- Kwallet – the standard KDE password manager (not shown)
- Google Desktop Search – yeah, I use it – sue me (not shown)
Here is my windows machine:
Screenshot.menu Os X For Taskbar 7
Once again, minimalistic approach. I try to run as few things on that machine because it is old, and I want to squeeze as much performance out of it as I can.
- The Language Bar – for switching keyboard layouts
- The Standard Network Manager Icon
- McAfee Antivirus (hidden) – I paid for it few millenia ago and they have been diligently charging my credit card ever since and I never got around to cancel it and use something else
- There is also a sound manager, and “safely remove hardware” icon there and nothing else.
Now it’s your turn. What is in your Quick Launch tool bar? What is running in your tray. Let me know!
[tags]quick launch, system tray, icons, launchy, katapult[/tags]