How to take a screenshot on a Mac - the comprehensive guide

Posted:
in General Discussion edited August 2019
If you ever wondered how to take a screenshot on a Mac, here's a comprehensive guide of not only how to do it, but every option available to you from Apple and third-party apps.

How to take a screenshot on a Mac
We could clean our camera better.


Editor's note: We got a giant response to our Mac screenshot guide, and a lot of requests for a video tutorial. So, here it is!

We must love our Mac screens. Apple gives us five ways to take screenshots or screen grabs of them, each with options. There are at least as many other third-party apps that will do exactly the same thing.

Or rather, not quite exactly. Each option of Apple's and each third-party app does this grabbing of your screen in slightly different ways. The principle is always the same, but it's the method you use and and precisely what results you get that make the difference.





It makes the difference over whether it's worth paying for an app or just using Apple's built-in options. And it makes a difference, too, over just what you can then use the images for. You'll always be able to take an image and work on it in, say, Photoshop or Pixelmator Pro, but many of the screen grab tools available will let you work directly on the screenshot.

Start with Apple

Apple has long had ways for you to take screenshots on the Mac and only last year added more with the release of macOS Mojave. What it's never done, though, is make it obvious how to take a screenshot on a Mac, which can be frustrating for new users.

You can't use the menus in the Finder or most of your favorite apps to take a screen grab, you can solely use a keyboard shortcut. That makes perfect sense since a menu would get in the way of your screen shot, but no one could possibly guess that Command-Shift-3 was the keystroke you need.

Screenshot 101

Hold down Command-Shift-3 and, immediately, whatever is on your screen is saved as a PNG file on your desktop. You wanted a screenshot, you've got one, you're done.

Except that this basic Command-Shift-3 keystroke takes a grab of the entire screen when you might want just a portion. It also takes the shot immediately, perhaps before you've got everything ready.

It also briefly puts what Apple calls a floating thumbnail in the bottom right-hand corner of your screen.

This is exactly what you may be used to from taking screen grabs on your iOS device -- except it isn't. There's one crucial difference, which is that if you take a second screen shot before the first thumbnail vanishes, your new grab includes it.

On iOS, the system is intelligent enough to ignore the thumbnail and grab whatever is underneath it, but macOS is not.

How to take a screenshot on a Mac
What's great is that you can circle and annotate anything. What's not so great is that you have to watch you don't accidentally include a thumbnail at bottom right.


Then this basic screen grabbing saves the image to the desktop and you could end up with a lot of those to clear off later. And, just to cap it all, the Command-Shift-3 images will never include your mouse cursor.

So if you're just trying to show someone which tick box to click in, this approach doesn't get you the mouse cursor over the box, it doesn't even get you just the dialog box.

Fortunately, other options can.

Go one better

Press Command-Shift-4 instead, and you get a much different result. As soon as you press those keys, your cursor turns to a crosshair. Click and drag that crosshair over an area you want to take a screen grab of, and as soon as you let go of your mouse or trackpad, that's what you get.

Maybe the most common use for selecting a portion of the screen is when you're trying to take a shot of a single window. It's sufficiently common that Apple has you covered.

Press Command-Shift-4 to get the crosshairs, but this time don't click. Move your mouse cursor over the window you want to grab, and then tap the space bar. The whole window turns a light blue and your cursor becomes an icon of a camera.

How to screenshot Mac
Notice the crosshairs at the bottom right of the grey area. We're dragging to select an area we want grabbed.


Click the mouse or press the Return key, and a screen grab of just that window will be saved to your desktop.

If you don't want to clutter up your desktop with screengrabs that you're just making to send to someone and forget about, you don't have to.

This time, press Command-Control-Shift-4. Everything works the same as it does with crosshairs and selecting windows, but instead of saving the PNG file to your desktop, your Mac puts the image into the clipboard. Go into Mail, or any other app, and simply Paste.

So now you can highlight a particular area, make a screen grab, paste it into an email message and move on.

Except you still haven't got that mouse cursor, and you still didn't get that context menu displayed in time.

One more

As of macOS Mojave, you can now press Command-Shift-5 to get screenshots as well. If you only learn one keystroke, this is the one because it gives you all of the various options in one place.

Press that key combination and you get a floating palette of options at the bottom of your screen.

How to screenshot Mac
As of macOS Mojave, we get a deeply comprehensive set of screen grab options built in


To the left are options for taking screen grabs. So there's a button for grabbing your whole screen, then next to it one for just grabbing a particular window. Then there's a selection button, with an icon of a square made up of dotted lines, which is how you say you want to drag to select part of the screen.

There are then controls for doing the same with video, taking screen movies of the whole or part of the screen.

Next to those, though, there is a button for Options. In this section, you can change where screenshots are saved, and you can set a timer. Tell your Mac to take a screen grab any time from immediately to five seconds from now. That's how you can press the button and scurry to arrange menus.

Here you'll also find an option called Show Mouse Pointer. Unfortunately, it's not quite what you think or quite what Apple appears to say. It will show the mouse pointer in your screen shot, but solely if that shot is of the entire Mac's window.

If you just want to grab a portion, you can, but you're not getting the mouse cursor showing in it, regardless of what the setting says.

That's annoying, but there's a reason this is an option and not a default. There's even a reason we could believe Apple simply hasn't noticed that Show Mouse Pointer has this limitation. It's that the mouse pointer is not that useful in a still image,

How to screenshot Mac
Notice the camera icon. The window selected in blue will be grabbed when you click or hit Return.


Show someone a screen shot of your entire Mac display and they will have trouble finding the cursor. You're much better off marking up your images with annotations.

Marking up

There's one more option in that Command-Shift-5 pallete, and that's Show Floating Thumbnail. This is where you can switch off the thumbnail that appears at the bottom right of your screen, if you want to.

While it's a pain when you're taking a lot of shots and have to wait for the thumbnail to vanish between each one, there's a reason Apple makes this the default. When the thumbnail image appears on your screen, you can click on it to open it up into an editor. Before it's even saved to your desktop, you can edit it.

You can crop the image, rotate it -- or annotate any part of it. Right within macOS, you can draw arrows pointing to elements, you can draw ragged circles around them, and you can write text notes.

So you might show someone a dialog box that needs three things to be turned on or off. Point out each part, and you can number them, or you can write 'on' or 'off' right there.

When you're finished, click Done and the image is saved to your desktop.

This does all require you to be fast enough to click on the thumbnail before it vanishes. And it's funny how it feels as if the thumbnail lingers when you don't want it, but races away when you do.

Even if you don't catch it in time, though, you can find the image in the Finder and annotate from there. Either right click on the file, choose Quick Actions and then Markup, or click to select an image, then press the space bar to get a Quick Look.

While Quick Look is on screen, you'll find a Markup button at top right.

There's still more

The screen grab features of macOS are so comprehensive as to be practically absurd. It's hard to imagine anyone ever needing all of this -- until that someone is you, and suddenly you've got a specific task to do that this solves perfectly.

There's no question but that as of macOS Mojave, Apple has the giant majority of users covered for this. Yet there is more that other company's apps can do.

How to screenshot Mac
Snappy can share password-protected screenshots


The free Snappy, for example, is similar to Apple's one in that it lets you take a shot and then immediately mark it up. However, it keeps the shots in a library rather than saving them to your desktop. And, while Apple's ones come with the regular Share sheet to email macOS screenshots and so on, Snappy goes further.

It gives you access to those same sharing options, but it also has more direct links to other apps such as Slack. And it can have what it calls self-destructing images that will delete themselves after a set amount of time. Or you can password-protect an image right there before you share it anywhere.

There are many others, such as Monosnap which offers quick annotation, and there are screen movie recording apps that will let you also take single screengrab images.

One that still offers a feature Apple doesn't, is the $19 CleanShot. This takes screengrabs like all of the rest of them, but, if you choose, it will hide all the mess on your desktop first. When you've taken fifty screenshot images in order to test out all of Apple's options and then thirty more to test out the features of third-party alternatives, you might be tempted by that.

There you have it. Now you know how to take a screenshot on a Mac with expert precision.
StrangeDaysphilboogiecgWerks

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 19
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 19
    sandorsandor Posts: 658member
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    The Develop menu in Safari lets you do it:

    Develop -> Web Inspector -> right click on the element you want (or whole page) and select "Capture Screenshot"



    netlingStrangeDaysRayz2016cornchipGG1FileMakerFellerwatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 19
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    Firefox has that feature built into it. Sandro answered on how to do it in Safari, to add to his, enable the developer menu under Safari preferences.  

    Also in Cmd-Shift-4, you can hit the space bar to take a screenshot on the window your in. 
    edited August 2019 watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 19
    sandorsandor Posts: 658member
    netling said:
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.

    Also in Cmd-Shift-4, you can hit the space bar to take a screenshot on the window your in. 
    Or any of your open windows (even if they are mostly hidden) Good call netling - i have always liked the space bar --> window option.

    The auto-naming of Apple screenshots with the date & time down to the second is also a wonderful thing.

    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 19
    dougddougd Posts: 292member
    It was so easy with Grab why the hell did they change it?
    cornchip
  • Reply 6 of 19
    pscooter63pscooter63 Posts: 1,080member
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    Search the app store for something like "screenshot web stitch".
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 19
    I so miss Littlesnapper. It had a great toolset, wonderful (non-destructive) markup options, and a built-in library. One of my favorite features was that a screen capture was automatically copied to the clipboard, which made it super easy to grab a screenshot that I could email to my team. It still (somewhat) works under Mojave, but has had quirks under the past few versions of MacOS and I don't expect it'll run much longer. Ember was an okay replacement upgrade, but both have since been discontinued.

    I wish there was a good alternative... 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 19
    sandorsandor Posts: 658member
    I miss Snapz Pro - it was always my command-shift-5 to allow quick video screen caps. Ambrosia's connection to RIT got me using it way too long ago!


    FileMakerFellerwatto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 19
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    Having to press to 4 and four buttons for a screenshot is excessive when you're using this feature often. I suggest changing it to Command-3 and Command-4 for saving the desktop and window, respectively, to the desktop. It's an easy edit in Sys Prefs » Keyboard pane » Shortcuts tab.

    I also recommend altering shortcuts for apps like iTunes/TV to allow for fullscreen video with a simple Command-F and even allowing for Paste and Match Style for apps like Pages/Numbers/Word/Excel to be Command-V if maintaining formatting is something you almost always require when working.
    FileMakerFellerphilboogiewatto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 19
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    The program Capto (https://www.globaldelight.com/capto/) captures web page windows, and does screen and video captures as well. Cost is $19.99. I have found this program very useful in capturing and editing a variety of screen items for Powerpoint presentations and how-to guides.
    FileMakerFellerwatto_cobra
  • Reply 11 of 19
    sandorsandor Posts: 658member
    Soli said:
    Having to press to 4 and four buttons for a screenshot is excessive when you're using this feature often. I suggest changing it to Command-3 and Command-4 for saving the desktop and window, respectively, to the desktop. It's an easy edit in Sys Prefs » Keyboard pane » Shortcuts tab.


    but that is how i switch tabs in safari (command+1 or 2 or 3 or 4 etc)

    watto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 19
    philboogiephilboogie Posts: 7,675member
    sandor said:
    Soli said:
    Having to press to 4 and four buttons for a screenshot is excessive when you're using this feature often. I suggest changing it to Command-3 and Command-4 for saving the desktop and window, respectively, to the desktop. It's an easy edit in Sys Prefs » Keyboard pane » Shortcuts tab.


    but that is how i switch tabs in safari (command+1 or 2 or 3 or 4 etc)

    I use Cmd-Shift-] and Cmd-Shift-[ for that
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 19
    philboogiephilboogie Posts: 7,675member

    You can't use the menus to take a screen grab, you can solely use a keyboard shortcut.
    Of course you can. You think Apple wouldn't think of that? It's in Preview, the obvious place to look:


    watto_cobraDiletante
  • Reply 14 of 19
    sandorsandor Posts: 658member
    sandor said:
    Soli said:
    Having to press to 4 and four buttons for a screenshot is excessive when you're using this feature often. I suggest changing it to Command-3 and Command-4 for saving the desktop and window, respectively, to the desktop. It's an easy edit in Sys Prefs » Keyboard pane » Shortcuts tab.


    but that is how i switch tabs in safari (command+1 or 2 or 3 or 4 etc)

    I use Cmd-Shift-] and Cmd-Shift-[ for that
    That is just forward & back - the numbers will go straight to that specific tab.

    We run a web-based PACS & i am constantly switching between 1 of 8 tabs, so this makes dead simple - My 8 pages load in separate tabs every morning, i switch back & forth between the tabs all day, rinse repeat for the past 5 years.
    watto_cobraphilboogie
  • Reply 15 of 19
    zimmiezimmie Posts: 651member
    Also worth noting: Command-Shift-6 takes a screenshot of the Touch Bar.
    watto_cobrafastasleepphilboogie
  • Reply 16 of 19
    thefferon said:
    I've seen ump-teen articles on taking screenshots in MacOS, and I have been able to accomplish what I need to for a while. What I haven't seen – maybe because there may be no native support for it – is how to take shots of entire webpages in Safari. I wish someone would give that issue some love, since it comes up a lot more often, for me anyway, than the regular screenshot functionality.
    Paparazzi. Been using it for ages.


    watto_cobracgWerks
  • Reply 17 of 19

    There is a great supplementary tool for taking screen shots that I have found very useful named ScreenFloat:

    https://www.screenfloatapp.com/ScreenFloat_-_Make_your_Shots_fly/ScreenFloat_-_Make_your_Shots_fly%21.html

    The main job it does for me is to instantly create a floating window from a marquee selection which stays on top of all other windows as an instant reference, instead of scribbling something down.

  • Reply 18 of 19
    cgWerkscgWerks Posts: 2,952member
    Thank you, thank you, thank you... I didn't realize you can turn off that darn floating thumbnail thing! Yay!
  • Reply 19 of 19
    phredphred Posts: 19member
    I tried command,control,shift,4.I go to email to paste,and a blank square comes up, but the image doesn't appear.In the past it did.
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