![]() ![]() ![]() In a Word document, if you added a new line after each snag it'll look neat enough. In the OneNote page, you'll find all the snags on top of each other, just drag them to where you want them on the page so they're visible. You can output multiple snags (one at a time) from the Snagit Editor to a new page or an existing page in OneNote or to a new document (first time) or same document in Word. Click the Capture button or press the All-in-One keyboard shortcut, Shift-Control-C. Click the Capture button or press the default hotkey, the Print Screen key. There are add-ins for the SnagIt Editor available to output to OneNote (in the editor click "Share" on the menu at the very top, then select "Get more outputs." which'll take you to a web page where you can get the plugins (and have to restart SnagIt to activate it)). To initiate an All-in-One Image Capture: Snagit on Windows Snagit on Mac 1. When selecting the area, use the magnifier for pixel accuracy. Click the Capturebutton or press Print Screen(Windows) or Control+Shift+C(Mac). In the Capture window, select the Imagetab. This doesn't solve JL1's comment, but it might help with the OP's issue.įor JL1's issue, there's a slightly different workaround if you have Microsoft's OneNote or Word. Learn how to capture a screenshot of anything on your screen from the Snagit Capture window. ![]() If you don't have Windows 10, you might be able to get a 3rd-party PDF app to do something similar. It would be good to have something like this as a "Share" destination, but it's a workaround that works ok for me. So when I want a PDF of my capture, I can capture it to the SnagIt Editor, then press Ctrl+P (or File/Print/Print to.) and it saves the snag as a PDF file to any folder you like, including cloud-replicated folders. It has a printer driver called "Microsoft Print to PDF" built right in. ![]()
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