How To Print Screen On Windows |link| File
It’s universal. It works on every version of Windows from 95 to 11. The Bad: There’s zero feedback. No sound, no flash, no notification. Beginners often press it multiple times, think nothing happened, and give up. Also, saving it requires two extra steps (open an image editor → paste → save). For a modern OS, this feels archaic.
Useful for power users who need to paste directly into a chat or document, but too opaque for casual users. The Game-Changer: Windows + Shift + S (Snipping Tool Reborn) If you take only one thing away from this topic, it should be this shortcut. Microsoft finally integrated the Snipping Tool into a seamless overlay with Windows + Shift + S .
One shortcut, zero paste steps, organized folder. Cons: You always get the entire monitor(s). No cropping. It’s all or nothing. Also, on laptops with function keys, you may need Fn + Windows + PrtScn , which feels like a finger twister.
Deducting one star for the lack of scrolling capture and cloud integration, but otherwise a powerful, under-taught feature set.
It saves you from cropping out your taskbar, browser tabs, or secondary monitor. If you need to capture just one dialog box or a single application window, this is cleaner and faster than any snip tool.
Ideal for capturing quick references, game screenshots (Xbox Game Bar is better for games, though), or documentation where you’ll crop later. The Forgotten Hero: Alt + PrtScn This shortcut captures only the active window (not the whole screen) to your clipboard.