Screen Clipping Question

P

PT

With the desired website open, I press Windows-S. The screen grays out, and
I can then left click and drag to select an appropriate rectangular block of
the web page.

But I can't seem to drag below the area showing on the screen. In other
words, if the web page is deep enough that I'd normally have to scroll down
it to view the rest, I can't use the method above to capture any of the
"below the picture" material.

Is there a trick?
 
E

Erik Sojka (MVP)

That tool is a screenshot capture tool, not a document or webpage capture
tool.

There should be a "Send to OneNote" icon on the IE toolbar which will send
the entire web page into OneNote. You can also always Select-
All/Copy/Paste if you want to edit the webpage in ON.
 
R

Rainald Taesler

PT shared these words of wisdom:
With the desired website open, I press Windows-S. The screen grays
out, and I can then left click and drag to select an appropriate
rectangular block of the web page.

OK. That's just the way it should be.
But I can't seem to drag below the area showing on the screen. In
other words, if the web page is deep enough that I'd normally have
to scroll down it to view the rest, I can't use the method above to
capture any of the "below the picture" material.

Is there a trick?

No, not a "trick".

But taking a "sreen shot" of what is "not really" a screen-shot - as
you want to have it (capturing things which are not really "on sreen"
[but somewehre else, maybe somwhere dee down]) - , one simply needs
*additional* instruments:
"Snagit" from TechSmith can do it. But it's not free:
http://www.techsmith.com/snagit.asp

With this tool you can take "seen-shots" even of "scrolling" content
of websites.

Rainald
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top