While not free, you might consider CaptureWizPro from PixelMetrics. It costs $40.Just discovered this and works great but I can't figure out how to scroll the page to select large columns. If that feature does not exist does anyone know a free software that will? Thanks!
I meant just simply selecting a part of the page regardless of text or picture and scrolling down.You can "Select" Text for miles,
then Paste it into a new RTF-Document for temporary storage.
Next, if You need any included Pictures, save them to a New-Folder on your Desktop.
Then use "Open-Office" (freeware) to create your own HTML or PDF or RTF or ODT or PNG File.
Depending upon just how much Text You want to Copy,
You may be able to Un-Zoom the Page until You can see everything You want,
but this may have pretty bad resolution.
Of course You could just Right-Click---> Save as, HTML-file.
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That is something that CaptureWizPro does very well. You can either manually scroll, or you can tell it to capture the contents of a window and it will automatically scroll as needed to get everything (although I had some difficulty using this feature when it was first added many years ago -- I would imagine that's been cleaned up long since).I meant just simply selecting a part of the page regardless of text or picture and scrolling down.
That can be done in some websites but some web developers use some of the advanced screen rendering features of HTML5 that only load images or text when it is in the viewport. That means some images are not even loaded until the user scrolls to them. This increases page rendering speed when a lot of images are present. You can see this happen on many news websites - as you scroll, it seems more stories keep populating.I meant just simply selecting a part of the page regardless of text or picture and scrolling down.
The print screen key should copy the whole display to clipboard. Using Alt-Print screen should copy only the active window (active application) to clipboard. You can then past to whichever location you want.The MS snipping tool freezes the display. The mouse then clicks the 2 opposite corners of the image window to place in the clipboard. But, it is only an image. You cannot use it to edit text as it IS an image, not text! Once the image is selected and placed in the clipboard, the screen is active again. It also has the option to grab the screen of the full webpage as well as to do a freeform snip for an irregular shape instead of a box. Mine has been assigned to my keyboards "Print Screen" key as it is otherwise useless.
Sorry can you explain the scrolling? I took your advice and started a free trail before buying. I want to get scrolling to work but it's not working for me.That is something that CaptureWizPro does very well. You can either manually scroll, or you can tell it to capture the contents of a window and it will automatically scroll as needed to get everything (although I had some difficulty using this feature when it was first added many years ago -- I would imagine that's been cleaned up long since).
I need a scroll feature though as most info I need is further down the page.The print screen key should copy the whole display to clipboard. Using Alt-Print screen should copy only the active window (active application) to clipboard. You can then past to whichever location you want.
I haven't installed CaptureWiz on my current machine yet -- the Windows Snipping tool is good enough for everything I've needed thus far since I got it -- and I'm not using the machine that it is installed on (a rather dated edition). As I said, I did have some issues when I tried that feature years ago.Sorry can you explain the scrolling? I took your advice and started a free trail before buying. I want to get scrolling to work but it's not working for me.
Look here...I need a scroll feature though as most info I need is further down the page.
Hi there,Just discovered this and works great but I can't figure out how to scroll the page to select large columns. If that feature does not exist does anyone know a free software that will? Thanks!
by Jake Hertz
by Aaron Carman
by Jake Hertz
by Aaron Carman