Chromebook, say, ‘Cheese!’ Here’s how to take a screenshot on a Chromebook
Chromebooks and other devices that run Chrome OS are great if you want a simple and cost-effective machine for accessing the web. Google’s browser-for-everything approach can cause some confusion, however, especially for general functions like taking a screenshot in Windows or doing the same on MacOS. While Chromebooks don’t include a “Print screen” key, learning how to take a screenshot on a Chromebook is actually fairly simple — whether you need to grab the entire screen or just a portion.
Capturing a full screenshot
To take a screenshot of everything you see on your Chromebook’s screen at once, hold down the “Ctrl” button and press the “Switch window” key. The latter button is located in the top row, in between the “Full-screen” and “Brightness down” buttons, and is represented by multiple squares.
On Chromebooks, the Multi-Window button is in between “Full-screen” and “Brightness down.”
Once you press both of them, you see a notification in the bottom corner of the screen alerting you that your screenshot has been saved. Screenshot image files save directly to the Chromebook’s “Downloads” folder, so you can take and access screenshots even when offline, and are labeled with the date and time they were recorded. Click the notification to open the Downloads folder and select the image file.
Note: Screenshots are saved locally and won’t be available on Google Drive unless you manually move the file.
Capturing a partial screenshot
Chrome OS can also select only a portion of your screen to save. Hold down the “Ctrl” and “Shift” keys at once, then press the “switch window” button. Chrome’s cursor will be temporarily replaced with a crosshair. Click and drag a square across the portion of the screen you want to save, then release the trackpad or mouse button. The partial screenshot will be saved in the Downloads folder, the same as a full screenshot.
Copying screenshots
Chrome OS doesn’t save screenshots as copied images like Windows does when the “Print screen” button is pressed. If you’d like to simply copy a screenshot (for insertion into an image editor, for example), watch the notification that appears above the system clock. Click the “Copy to clipboard” button, then press Ctrl+V when you want to paste it.
Editing screenshots
The screenshots captured by Chrome OS are ready to share, but if you want to do a little more with them, you should familiarize yourself with Chrome’s built-in image editor.
Open the Downloads folder, double-click your screenshot to open it in the image viewer, then click the pen icon in the bottom right corner of the window to enter edit mode. Tools for cropping, rotation, and brightness adjustments will appear at the bottom of the window.
When you’re done, click the pen icon again to finalize your edits. The built-in editor doesn’t allow you to save copies, so you may want to copy the image manually before working on it.
Using external keyboards
If you’re using a Chrome-powered desktop (also known as a Chromebox) or you’ve plugged an external keyboard into your Chromebook, the keyboard probably uses a standard function key row instead of Chrome’s dedicated button row. The good news is that the function keys do the same job — F1 goes back, F2 goes forward, et cetera. The F5 button works as the “switch window” button on standard keyboards, so the screenshot command becomes Ctrl + F5.
Other screenshot tools
The built-in image tools for Chrome OS are a bit anemic, but luckily there are plenty of apps and extensions on Google’s Chrome Web Store to help add extra functionality. Here are some helpful picks:
Clipular — An all-in-one Chrome app that lets you save, edit, and annotate screenshots. It can also save screenshots directly to Google Drive.
FireShot — Save an entire page as an image without multiple screenshots.
Pixlr — An online image editor with much more robust tools than the one built into Chrome’s image viewer.
Awesome Screenshot Minus — This screenshot tool supports direct annotation on Chromebooks with touchscreens.
File System for Dropbox — If you prefer Dropbox to the built-in Google Drive, this app will mount your Dropbox folder in the standard file browser. Just copy your screenshots over from the Downloads folder.
If you’re still having any issues with your Chromebook, our full Chrome OS troubleshooting guide can help you identify and resolve them.
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