Click the Floating Thumbnail and it'll open in a Markup View preview window (but not Preview) with all of the markup tools you get in Preview. You can swipe the Floating Thumbnail away or just let it slip away on its own and it'll be saved to the spot you last saved a screenshot. If you embrace the Floating Thumbnail, then you'll gain quick access to Markup tools to annotate your screenshot.
#HOW TO TAKE SCREENSHOTS ON MAC AIR PRO#
If you've got the 16-inch MacBook Pro or another model with the Touch Bar, did you know you can take a screenshot of what's currently showing on the Touch Bar? Just hit Command-Shift-6 to take a very wide and skinny screenshot of your Touch Bar. Bonus for Touch Bar MacBooks: Command-Shift-6 If the screenshot panel is in your way, you can grab its left edge and drag it to a new spot on your screen. Lastly, you can choose to show your mouse pointer in a screenshot or video. Unlike your iPhone ( $899 at Amazon), you can turn off this preview thumbnail on your Mac. It lets you choose where to save your screenshot - Desktop, Documents, Clipboard, Mail, Messages, Preview or Other Location and set a 5- or 10-second delay so you can line up items that might otherwise disappear when you engage your screenshot tool.īy default, the Show Floating Thumbnail option is enabled, which puts a little preview thumbnail of your just-capture screenshot in the lower-right corner of your screen, similar to the screenshot procedure with iOS. On the left is an X button to close the screenshot panel, but you can also just hit the Escape key to exit out. Likewise, the two video-recording buttons let you record your entire screen or a selection of it. There are three screenshot buttons that let you capture the entire screen, a window or a selection of your screen. Shift-Command-5Ī shortcut command introduced in MacOS Mojave (2018), this combination calls up a small panel at the bottom of your display with your screen capture options.
You can toggle between moving the bottom edge and right edge by keeping the mouse button or touchpad engaged and pressing the Shift key. Without releasing the mouse button, release the Shift key and hit it again to reposition the right edge of your selection area. Hold down the Shift key (after dragging to highlight an area but before releasing the mouse button or trackpad): This locks in each side of the selection area made with the crosshairs save the bottom edge, letting you move your mouse up or down to position the bottom edge. It's very handy if your initial selection area is off by a few pixels just hold down the space bar to reposition it before releasing the mouse button to snap a screenshot. Press and hold the space bar (after dragging to highlight an area but before releasing the mouse button or trackpad): This locks in the shape and size of the selection area but lets you reposition it on the screen. A screenshot captured by this method features a white border around the window with a bit of a drop shadow. Click on your desired window to take a screenshot of it. Press and release the space bar: The crosshair turns into a little camera icon, which you can move over any open window. You have a number of other options after hitting Shift-Command-4: Release the mouse button or trackpad to take the shot. Use this keyboard combo to turn your cursor into a crosshair, which you can drag to select a portion of your screen to capture. This keyboard shortcut captures a screenshot of your entire screen.