

The 5- and 10-second delay options are also useful and appreciated additions. Yet, I find myself using it more to annotate screenshots without opening preview and delete screenshots.
#CHANGE SCREENSHOT DESTINATION MAC MAC#
Longtime Mac screenshots may be slow to adopt the new Command-Shift-5 shortcut.

This combination calls up a small panel at the bottom of your display with your screen capture options. This shortcut command was introduced in macOS Mojave (2018).

You can toggle between moving the bottom edge and straight 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. 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. Hold down the Shift key: (after dragging to highlight an area but before releasing the mouse button or trackpad). Hold down the space bar to reposition it before releasing the mouse button to snap a screenshot. It’s convenient if your initial selection area is off by a few pixels. This locks in the shape and size of the selection area but lets you reposition it on the screen. Press and hold the space bar (after dragging to highlight an area but before releasing the mouse button or trackpad). 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 cursor turns into a little camera icon, which you can move over any open window. You have several other options after hitting Shift-Command-4: Release the mouse button or trackpad to take the shot. Partial screenshot on mac = Command+Shift+4įurthermore, Use this keyboard combo to turn your cursor into a crosshair, which you can drag to select a part of your screen to capture.
