![]() The flexible All-in-One capture mode used here should suit most requirements, but Snagit’s capture behaviour can be fine-tuned in the Settings window. Clicking one of these scrolls the window automatically as Snagit captures the appropriate sections, which are then all stitched together to make a seamless whole. A web page that’s taller and/or wider than its browser window, for example, causes Snagit to displays yellow scroll buttons on the window's bottom edge, right-hand and bottom-right corner, as required. ![]() ![]() So far, so straightforward, but Snagit’s strengths come to the fore when capturing the content of a window that won’t all fit into one screen. The entire screen can then be captured by clicking the crosshair anywhere, while clicking and dragging it captures the selected area - something that’s assisted by the crosshair’s pixel-level magnification. Once installed, Snagit overrides Windows’ default Print Screen key behaviour (though the shortcut can be changed) and, when pressed, this instead pops up a crosshair on the screen. ![]() Now on version 11, Snagit has been around since 1990, but the program has long since expanded to include all manner of screen capture and subsequent image-editing features. ![]()
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