| Command (Keys) | What it does | Where it goes | | --- | --- | --- | | (Print Screen) | Captures entire screen | Clipboard (paste into Paint, Word, etc.) | | Alt + PrtScn | Captures only the active window | Clipboard | | Win + PrtScn | Captures entire screen | Pictures\Screenshots folder + Clipboard | | Win + Shift + S | Opens Snipping Tool / Snip & Sketch (select area, window, or full screen) | Clipboard + Notification (click to annotate/save) |
On newer MacBooks with Touch Bar, you can also use Shift + Command + 6 to capture the Touch Bar. 3. Linux (Ubuntu / GNOME / Most Distros) Linux commands vary by desktop environment. Below are the most common for GNOME (Ubuntu default). command for print screen
Taking a screenshot is one of the most common computer tasks. But the exact command depends on your operating system and what you want to capture. Below is the complete breakdown. 1. Windows (All Versions) Windows offers several built-in commands for print screen. | Command (Keys) | What it does |
| Command | What it does | Where it goes | | --- | --- | --- | | | Captures entire screen | Desktop (as .png file) | | Shift + Command + 4 | Turns cursor into crosshair – drag to select area | Desktop | | Shift + Command + 4 then Space | Captures a specific window (camera icon appears) | Desktop | | Shift + Command + 5 | Opens Screenshot toolbar (video & screen capture options) | Choose destination | | Control + Shift + Command + 3 | Captures entire screen to Clipboard | Clipboard | Below are the most common for GNOME (Ubuntu default)