About us
English
Save Screenshot in Laptop
Effortless Guide to Taking Laptop Screenshots
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
To take a screenshot on a laptop, use the 'PrtScn' key to capture your screen, or 'Alt + PrtScn' to capture the active window. You can paste it into Paint to save.
Press 'Windows + Shift + S' to trigger Snip & Sketch in Windows 11 S Mode. Select the area to capture. The screenshot will be available in the clipboard for saving.
Capture using 'PrtScn' or 'Windows + Shift + S' for selective snips. Open an image editor like Paint to paste and save your screenshot as an image file.
Yes, press 'Windows + PrtScn' to save a screenshot directly to the 'Screenshots' folder within 'Pictures' on Windows laptops.
Navigate to your 'Screenshots' folder within 'Pictures', select all (Ctrl + A), and press 'Delete'. Confirm the deletion to clear all screenshots.
While built-in options are available, you can download apps like Snagit or Lightshot for more advanced features and editing options.
After taking a screenshot, open it in an image editor like Paint or Photos. Use tools available to draw, highlight, and annotate as needed before saving.
For laptop screenshots, use built-in tools like Snip & Sketch for basic annotations. Dedicated apps provide advanced features for more detailed work.
Use 'Windows + Shift + S' for Snip & Sketch. Paste the screenshot into Word by using 'Ctrl + V' to insert your screen capture into the document.
Notebooks typically use the same Windows keyboard shortcuts like 'PrtScn' or 'Windows + Shift + S' for taking screenshots.
No dedicated screenshot tool is needed. Use 'Windows + PrtScn' to directly save. For annotations, third-party tools are beneficial.
For simple annotations, use the default Paint app on Windows after pasting your screenshot. For detailed edits, consider additional software.
Yes, Windows laptops have built-in functions. Shortcuts like 'PrtScn' and 'Windows + Shift + S' help capture screenshots efficiently.
No, screenshots should be edited and saved one at a time using built-in tools. Batch processing requires separate software.
No, screenshot shortcuts and built-in tools are specific to laptops and desktop environments. Mobile platforms have separate methods.