Use Windows Printscreen And Alt + Printscreen Buttons - learn Latest Computer And Mobile Hacking Tricksa
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There may be times when you're trying to explain some computer issue to someone,
and it would be very helpful to show that person exactly what you are seeing on your
computer screen. This could involve an error message because you are having
problems, a dialog box that needs to be filled in in a special manner, some fun and
interesting easter egg you found in the program, etc.
Print Screen Button
A standard keyboard has a Print Screen button that, in the olden computer days
(pre-Windows), used to take the information that was showing on the monitor and
print it to the "LPT1" printer. Windows changed that. Now when you press the Print
Screen button, nothing appears to happen, but in the background a graphic image of
your current screen is stored into the clipboard.
After performing a Print Screen, you can paste (Ctrl+V) this graphic image into
almost any Windows-based product. The resulting file can then be saved or printed.
�� Warning: Although you can paste a print screen into an e-mail message,
if the intended recipient is not an internal e-mail user, they
may not see your print screen when the e-mail arrives. To be
safe, paste the print screen into a word processing document
and attach the document to the e-mail, or paste the print
screen into Paint and attach the Paint file to the e-mail.

Alt+Print Screen
Occasionally you may want to copy just an error message or another portion of your
screen. If the portion of your screen is an independent window -- an error message
box, a dialog box, a "normal" window (not minimized, but not a maximized window
either) -- you can perform an Alt+Print Screen. This keystroke will copy just the
active window to your clipboard.

and it would be very helpful to show that person exactly what you are seeing on your
computer screen. This could involve an error message because you are having
problems, a dialog box that needs to be filled in in a special manner, some fun and
interesting easter egg you found in the program, etc.
Print Screen Button
A standard keyboard has a Print Screen button that, in the olden computer days
(pre-Windows), used to take the information that was showing on the monitor and
print it to the "LPT1" printer. Windows changed that. Now when you press the Print
Screen button, nothing appears to happen, but in the background a graphic image of
your current screen is stored into the clipboard.
After performing a Print Screen, you can paste (Ctrl+V) this graphic image into
almost any Windows-based product. The resulting file can then be saved or printed.
�� Warning: Although you can paste a print screen into an e-mail message,
if the intended recipient is not an internal e-mail user, they
may not see your print screen when the e-mail arrives. To be
safe, paste the print screen into a word processing document
and attach the document to the e-mail, or paste the print
screen into Paint and attach the Paint file to the e-mail.

Alt+Print Screen
Occasionally you may want to copy just an error message or another portion of your
screen. If the portion of your screen is an independent window -- an error message
box, a dialog box, a "normal" window (not minimized, but not a maximized window
either) -- you can perform an Alt+Print Screen. This keystroke will copy just the
active window to your clipboard.

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