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8 Different Ways to Take a Screenshot without Using the Print Screen Key

8 Different Ways to Take a Screenshot without Using the Print Screen Key. In this article, what are the 8 ways to take a screenshot? What are the different ways to take a screenshot on a PC? How do you take a screenshot on a laptop without PrtScn and FN? as well as answers to the questions, Is there a different way to take a screenshot? i don’t have print screen on my keyboard? How do you take a screenshot without a key?

How do you take a screenshot without a key?

Greetings, friends! Have you ever tried to take a screenshot but the “print screen” key doesn’t work? It’s happened to me more than once! But don’t worry, because today I bring you four different ways to take a screenshot without using that key.

First of all, you have the option of using the Windows screen crop. To do this, press the Windows key + Shift + S. You will see how the screen turns white and you can select the area you want to capture with the mouse. Then, open Paint or another image editing program and paste the screenshot.

Secondly, you can use the crop tool on your computer. This tool can be found in the Windows Accessories section. They open the tool, select the area they want to capture and then save it as an image.

Third, they can use a screen capture program, such as Snipping Tool or Greenshot. These programs allow you to capture different areas of the screen and save them as an image.

And last but not least, they can use the screenshot function of their web browser. If you are browsing in Google Chrome, for example, press the Ctrl + Shift + I key to open the developer tools. Then, press Ctrl + Shift + P and type “screenshot”. You will see the option to capture a full screenshot or a section of the web page.

And there you have it folks! Four different ways to take a screenshot without using the “print screen” key. Remember that there are always solutions to problems, you just have to look for them! (as my grandfather used to say: “creativity is the mother of invention”) See you next time!


Is there a different way to take a screenshot?

As a software reviewer at PCMag, snapping screenshots is something I need to do many times each day. There’s no better way of showing readers how a program actually looks in operation than by showing screenshots. I mostly review Windows software, so I’m familiar with the various ways to capture screens on that operating system. Nearly every computer user occasionally needs to take a screenshot, if only to share what they’re seeing on the screen with a colleague.

It’s astonishing how long it has taken to perfect this simple capability. Windows has had screen-printing capabilities since the first PCs in the 1980s (their text-based option differed from today’s raster screenshots). Windows 10 introduced new ways to take screenshots, like using the Snip & Sketch utility, and taking screenshots in Windows 11 is even smarter with its version of the Snipping Tool.

Here, we’re concerned with screenshots in Windows 10. Below, I walk you through the several ways to capture the Windows 10 PC screen so that you can make an informed decision on which method works best for you.

1. Use Shift-Windows Key-S and Snip & Sketch

After many years of using Snagit (see below), this has become my primary screenshot method: Press the keyboard combo Shift-Windows Key-S, and you have a choice of capturing the full screen, a rectangular selection, a freehand selection, or an individual program window. An alternative way to invoke Snip & Sketch is via the Action Center’s Screen Snip button.

After using this keyboard shortcut, you momentarily see a small thumbnail panel notification at the lower right that says Snip Saved to Clipboard. Tap this to open the Snip & Sketch window. In this, you can crop the image and mark it up with a pen, pencil, highlighter, eraser, ruler. Then you can save the image to a folder of your choice, or share it using the standard Windows Share menu. That lets you send it to Instagram, Messenger, Mail, or any other app that accepts the file type. It also lets you send it to a nearby PC with Nearby Sharing enabled.

A couple things I wish Snip & Sketch had are text overlay and basic shapes, including the ever-useful arrow. If you  want to use this tool, you can go into Windows’ Settings app and choose Ease of Access > Keyboard and choose Use the PrtSc Button to Open Screen Snipping. Note that this requires restarting Windows.


2. Use the Print Screen Key With Clipboard


This is the longtime classic method of screenshotting in Windows 10. It’s especially useful for shooting apps that change appearance when you hit a keyboard combination. Often a menu will collapse as soon as you tap a shift key. Hitting the Print Screen or PrtSc key copies the entire screen to the Clipboard; adding Alt together with Print Screen copies only the active window rectangle.

You do need to take extra steps to open and save your image in an application that deals with images, such as Paint, Paint 3D, or even Photoshop (unless you take advantage of the next tip). Simply paste with Ctrl-V when you’re in a new document in one of those apps, and then you can go to town with editing, and finally, save the image to the folder of your choice.


3. Use Print Screen Key With OneDrive

This is one of the best things ever to hit screenshots in Windows, having arrived in 2015. As with the plain-old Print Screen key, you can save the entire screen or the active window with Print Screen or Alt-Print Screen, respectively. But after you go to OneDrive’s Settings panel and choose Automatically Save Screenshots/Capture to OneDrive from the Backup tab, you’re saved from having to open an image app, paste from the clipboard, and then save the file. Hit Print Screen, and you’ve got an image file saved, all in one step.

Windows’ Action Center (the slide-out panel on the right side of the screen) notifies you that your shot was saved, and you can click on the notification to take you right to the folder where it’s saved. If you use this method a lot, you’ll probably want more cloud storage than just the free 5GB. An Office 365 account (starting at $6.99 per month) gets you 1TB, as well as all the famous productivity applications.


4. Use the Windows Key-Print Screen Shortcut

This method was introduced with Windows 8, but it still works in Windows 10. It’s simpler than some of the other methods in this story. On tablets like the Surface Pro, you invoke this functionality by pressing the Volume Down and Power buttons at the same time. This or Windows Key-Print Screen key combo will momentarily darken the screen to show you it worked, and instantly save a PNG image file to your Pictures > Screenshots folder.

Alt-Windows Key-Print Screen saves just the active window, but, interestingly, this uses the Windows Game Bar (see next slide) functionality, saving your screenshot to your Videos/Captures folder. Both of these methods are good if you want instant saving without having to bother with the Clipboard or OneDrive cloud storage.


5. Use the Windows Game Bar

Windows Key-G opens the Game bar, which includes an icon looking like a webcam. Tap this to open the Capture section, which has a camera icon. Tap that, and your screenshot is saved to the Videos/Captures folder under your main user folder.


6. Use the Snipping Tool

7. Use Snagit or Another Third-Party Utility

Another way to take screenshots is by using a third-party tool. Our favorite screenshot app at PCMag is Snagit. Snagit has at least one major benefit over Windows’ built-in screenshot tools: You can snap away and all your shots remain in the utility’s repository, available at any time you might need them later. It’s the least disruptive way to shoot screens while continuing your work. After you’re ready to deal with the shots, you can browse the history and save the images you want to the folder of your choice.

Snagit also includes advanced tools like video and scrolling window screenshot tools. It offers handy image-editing and drawing tools, including brightness, arrows, text overlay, and borders. The downside? A Snagit license will set you back $62.99, but for those who need its advanced functionality, it’s worth the money.

Other good third-party screenshot options include Ashampoo Snap, Droplr, and Screencast-O-Matic. You can read about all of these in our Best Screen-Capture Apps roundup.


8. Double-Click Your Surface Pen

If you’re on a digital-inking-capable touch-screen PC like a Surface Pro, you can take a screenshot of your full screen simply by double-clicking on the Back button on a Surface Pen. This opens Snip and Sketch with the full screenshot ready for annotating, editing, and sharing.


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