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Save Screenshot in Mac
Effortlessly Save and Manage Screenshots on Mac
ou glissez-déposez un fichier
Prend en charge les formats PDF et image (maximum 100 Mo)
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Questions Fréquemment Posées
By default, screenshots on a Mac are saved to the desktop. You can find them there unless you've changed the save location in settings.
Press Command + Shift + 3 for the entire screen or Command + Shift + 4 for a selected area. These keyboard shortcuts are quick and efficient.
Yes, after taking your screenshot, you can easily convert it to JPG using an image editor. Mac screenshots are originally saved in PNG format.
You can change where your screenshots are saved by using the Terminal app. Enter a command to specify a new directory for saving screenshots.
The main shortcuts are Command + Shift + 3 for a full screen and Command + Shift + 4 for selected areas, making capturing screens quick.
Yes, by pressing Command + Control + Shift + 3 or Command + Control + Shift + 4, you save the screenshot directly to the clipboard.
Use an image annotation tool to draw, mark, or write on your screenshot once it is captured and stored on your desktop or chosen directory.
Screenshots go to the Desktop by default. You can check or change these settings via Mac's Preferences or via the Terminal for specific paths.
Yes, using third-party tools like Fireshot, you can capture a full page. The built-in tool can capture visible content only without scrolling.
Yes, upload your screenshot to a browser-based annotation tool to add highlights or text, then save the annotated version to your computer.
No, the annotation tool operates only on desktop browsers. For mobile annotation, you need to use mobile-specific apps.
You cannot edit existing text in screenshots directly. You may cover and rewrite text using annotation tools, but original editing isn't supported.
Yes, there's a 100 MB file limit for single uploads. This allows for substantial image or PDF annotation without overwhelming the system.
For screenshots, use the Command + Shift + 3 or 4 shortcuts. For regular documents, generally, Command + S is used for saving.
No, this browser-based tool processes one file at a time, ensuring detailed focus on each annotation task.