4. How to make screen-shot
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For PC users:
1. Look on your keyboard and find the key that says "Print Screen" or "PrtScn" or something like that.
2. On your monitor, make sure what you want to "print screen" will be shown on your monitor
3. Press "Print Screen" key
4. If you're on Fire Fox, Chrome, etc., then some sort of Print Screen window will show up. Find the button that says "copy" or something to that effect. Click on "copy" button.
5. If you're on Internet Explorer and if you see NOTHING HAPPENS after pressing PrtScn... that is "normal" please do not panic. Your screen-shot is already copied automatically into the temp copy file when you pressed PrtScn.
6. Open your graphics program (such as Paint, etc.)
7. Follow your graphics program's direction and go to the Edit menu and "Paste" the screen shot you have just taken to your graphics program's editing window, name it, and save the file to your computer.
Done.
(Thank you, Murf for posting following instruction for Windows 7!)
Windows 7 users.
Click start type in the word snipping click on snipping tool. highlight area to screen shot.
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For Mac users (I think this works, but I need to double check, since I do not use Mac ^^)
To capture the entire desktop, press Command-Shift-3. The screen shot will be automatically saved as a PNG file on your desktop.
To copy the entire desktop, press Command-Control-Shift-3. The screen shot will be placed on your clipboard for you to paste into another program.
To capture a portion of the desktop, press Command-Shift-4. A cross-hair cursor will appear and you can click and drag to select the area you wish to capture. When you release the mouse button, the screen shot will be automatically saved as a PNG file on your desktop. (The file is saved as PDF in Mac OS 10.3 and earlier.)
To capture a specific application window, press Command-Shift-4, then press the Spacebar. The cursor will change to a camera, and you can move it around the screen. As you move the cursor over an application window, the window will be highlighted. The entire window does not need to be visible for you to capture it. When you have the cursor over a window you want to capture, just click the mouse button and the screen shot will be saved as a PNG file on your desktop. (Or the file may be saved as PDF file ...please double check your Mac manual ^^)
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To capture a screen shot on the iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch:
Press and hold the menu button (the main button below the screen).
While the menu button is held down, press the power/lock button (the switch on the top edge of the device).
Note: You can also hold the lock button and press the menu button, or try to press the two buttons simultaneously. Do whatever is easiest, but if you keep both buttons held down too long, you will get the power down confirmation.
Your screen will flash white for a second and make a camera shutter noise (if you have the volume turned up) to indicate that the screen shot has been taken. But where is it?
The screen shots you take are automatically saved in the default Photos app under an album called "Saved Photos" or "Camera Roll" depending on your device. From here you can email one or more screen shots or other pictures, by clicking the menu icon (a rectangle with an arrow coming out of it, in the bottom left corner of the screen). Clicking the menu icon from a single picture will email the one image. If you click the menu button from an index page, you can select multiple pictures to email.