Re[2]: [opensuse] Capture screenshot
<<< 11.12.2006 10:07 - Kevin Donnelly "kevin@dotmon.com" >>> KD> On Monday 11 December 2006 08:31, Roland Turcan wrote:
KSnapshot is too easy and if I need to make many screenshots, then I need to assign filename after each picture, ...
KD> I think that's only the case if you want to change the base filename. If you KD> don't it just numbers them sequentially, eg filename,png, filename1,png, KD> filename2,png. Wouldn't this do for your purposes. Thank you for your reply: I have just got one quite good solution, which I haven't tested, but guy wrote, that is the way he uses. It should be a part of ImageMagick, which is called: [code] #!/bin/sh DATE=`date +%d-%m-%Y-%H-%M-%S` import -window root /home/roland/screen-shot-$DATE.png [/code] just to create icon or key shortcut to execute this script. PS: Maybe it will be useful for others, maybe somebody has different ideal, how to do it. I which nice day for all people on the Earth. -- Best regards, TRoland http://www.rotursoft.sk http://exekutor.rotursoft.sk -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Monday 11 December 2006 04:13, Roland Turcan wrote:
PS: Maybe it will be useful for others, maybe somebody has different ideal, how to do it.
I which nice day for all people on the Earth.
Thanks, Roland, for making me smile this morning! I use 'xgrab' for screen captures. I think it's installed by default, but you can check to see if it's installed on your system like this: As user in a shell: 'rpm -qa | grep xgrab' (no quotes) you should see something like this: xgrabsc-2.41-1025.2 if not, install it with YaST (or your favorite alternative package manager.) You should find it under 'Utilities -> Desktop' in your desktop menu system. It's quite stable, extremely flexible and easy to use. hth & regards, Carl -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (2)
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Carl Hartung
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Roland Turcan