You can take top-notch screen captures on any Mac PC, and afterward alter or share them any way you like. In the event that you’ve purchased or refreshed your Mac starting around 2018, you even approach the high-level screen capture menu, which will allow you to take recordings of your screen as well.
The following are four methods for taking screen captures on a Mac – and they just take straightforward console alternate ways.
Macintosh screen capture alternate routes
Each strategy for screenshotting on a Mac utilizes the Shift, Command, and number keys.
Keyboard Shortcut | Function |
Shift + Command + 3 | Capture a screenshot of the entire screen. |
Shift + Command + 4 | Highlight a specific part of the screen to screenshot. |
Shift + Command + 5 | Open the screenshot menu to record the video or edit your screenshot options. |
Shift + Command + 6 | Take a screenshot of the Touch Bar, if your Mac has one. |
Shift + Command + 3: Take a screen capture of the whole screen
To catch your whole screen, press and hold down Shift + Command + 3. In the event that you’re utilizing different screens, it’ll take and save screen captures of each screen.
At the point when you take the screen capture, you’ll see a little thumbnail preview in the base right corner of your screen, which you can snap to alter the screen capture. Look at the “screen capture menu” guide underneath for information on the best way to switch that off in the event that you don’t need it.
Shift + Command + 4: Capture a particular segment or window
To catch a particular piece of your screen, press Shift + Command + 4. Your mouse cursor will transform into a crosshair. You can then snap and drag this crosshair across any region of your screen. Relinquish the mouse button or trackpad to catch the chosen region, or press the Esc key to drop.
That is not everything you can do with this strategy. Subsequent to squeezing Shift + Command + 4, you can press other keys to open more choices:
- Catch a particular window: Press Shift + Command + 4 and afterward hit the spacebar. The crosshair will transform into a camera. Float the camera cursor over the window you need to catch and tap on it. When the screen capture is saved, it’ll have a dim boundary around it.
- Secure in the shape and size: After hauling the crosshair to make the featured region, press and hold the space bar. This locks the crate so it can’t change size. You can then drag the container anyplace on the screen. Simply discharge the spacebar to take your screen capture.
- Change the tallness and width: After hauling the crosshair to make a featured region, press and hold the Shift key. This permits you to change the stature and width of the case. You can flip between tallness and width by squeezing the Shift key. Relinquish the mouse button or trackpad to take the screen capture.
Shift + Command + 5: Use the screen capture menu
Current adaptations of the macOS (Mojave, Catalina, Big Sur, and Monterey) accompany a Screenshot application. To open this application, press Shift + Command + 5. A little menu board will show up at the lower part of the screen.
The three symbols on the left permit you to take a screen capture of the whole screen, a particular window, or a featured area. The following two symbols to the right will allow you to record a video of the whole screen, or simply a featured segment.
The Capture button on the extreme right will take the screen capture.
There’s additionally a menu marked Options. This menu allows you to pick where to save your screen capture, and how long you need between squeezing “Catch” and the screen capture is taken, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg.
Of note in this menu is the Show Floating Thumbnail choice, which is turned on naturally. At the point when this is empowered, after you take a screen capture, a small thumbnail of it will show up in the base right corner of the screen. The screen capture will not be saved to your PC until this thumbnail vanishes following a couple of moments.
Nonetheless, you can click this thumbnail before it vanishes to open the screen capture in another window. In this window, you can draw or type on it, crop it, share it by means of your Apple ID account, or erase it.
Get a picture of the Touch Bar
Not all Mac PCs have the Touch Bar, yet assuming you have one, you can take a screen capture of it.
Assuming there’s something on your Touch Bar that you might want to show others, you can screen capture it by squeezing Shift + Command + 6. This will promptly catch everything on your Touch Bar.
Where to find your Mac screen captures
Naturally, screen captures show up in your work area. It’ll naturally be named “Screen Shot,” trailed by the date and time you took it.
You can likewise change the area that your screen captures get saved to. Press Shift + Command + 5 to open the screen capture menu, then click Options. Utilize the menu that seems to choose another Save to the area.