Use this study guide to learn how to make screen captures and then to test your knowledge.
One of the common ways to get illustrations into technical documents electronically is to make screen captures directly from your computer screen. For example, you may be developing a user guide for a software application and want readers to be able to see what it is in the user interface you want them to press, select, or fill.
Note: The following tutorial is applicable to versions of Microsoft Word up to but excluding Word 2007. If you have problems using Word 2007 for this tutorial, contact your instructor.
When you capture a screen, you need to set it up rather carefully. Here are some considerations:
Setting up for screen captures. Imagine that you simply wanted to show readers how to change the color of text in Microsoft Word. The screen capture above is way too huge and messy for that. Notice all the red and green squiggly lines under things that Word thinks are misspelled or bad grammar. Notice the wasted white space above the title. All you really need is an image of the formatting bar on which the color-change icon (A) occurs.
To capture the screen:
Once you've captured a screen, it is in memory on your computer and will stay there until you copy something else. You can now paste this captured image into a document or into a graphic or word-processing application and modify it. You can also position the screen capture you just pasted. However, these are complex tasks; we'll look at them later. For now, try this:
You will probably want to crop (select a portion of) or size (reduce or enlarge) the image. These techniques are presented in a later unit in this course.
There are quite a number of screen-capture programs available as freeware and shareware on the World Wide Web. For example, you can go to shareware.com and search on screen capture. As of January 2001, there were over fifty "hits." Some of these applications have cropping, sizing, labelling, and file-conversion utilities. As you'll see, you typically have several more tasks to perform before a screen capture is ready for your text.
Okay! It's time to make sure you can get set up to make screen capture, make the screen capture, and then paste it into a document in your preferred word-processing software. If you've just been reading to this point, it's time now to try it out—see if you can create and paste a simple screen capture.
You'll get to cropping, sizing, positioning, labelling, and other editing techniques later in this course.
When you've successfully captured and pasted a screen image, send e-mail to your instructor confirming that. If you have problems, also contact your instructor by e-mail and explain the problem you are having.
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