164

What command(s) can I use in the terminal that's equivalent to the PrtSc (Print Screen) button?

I am running Ubuntu GNOME.

A.B.
  • 92,125
devav2
  • 37,290

9 Answers9

131

You can use the import tool available in the ImageMagick package (you need to install this if it's not already available on your system).

Then run the following command in a shell:

import screenshot.png

and select the window you want to capture or select a region by pressing the left mouse button and dragging.

import is a actually a very powerful command which can be used in many ways to capture the screen. For example, to capture the entire screen after some delay and resize it, use the following command:

import -window root -resize 400x300 -delay 200 screenshot.png

To see all the available options with the import command, go to ImageMagick’s website.


Another way to take a screenshot from the terminal is with scrot.

To install scrot run:

sudo apt-get install scrot

To take a screenshot in Linux from the terminal with scrot run:

scrot MyScreenshot.png

Some more options with scrot are here:

scrot -b -d 5 '%Y:%m:%d:%H:%M:%S.png' -e 'mv $f ~/Desktop/'

In this example:

  • -b specifies that the screenshot should include the window borders.
  • -d specifies a delay of five seconds.
  • '%Y:%m:%d:%H:%M:%S.png' will save the screenshot with a name based on the current date and time with the format specified, .png in this case.
  • -e 'mv $f ~/Desktop/' tells scrot to save the screenshot on the Desktop.

Based on @jack's comment: If you want to take a screenshot of a remote machine via an SSH session then you can do that by setting the DISPLAY environment variable to the display, like so:

DISPLAY=:0 scrot MyScreenshot.png
BenVida
  • 101
81

Open a terminal by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T and run:

gnome-screenshot

Use gnome-screenshot -d xx to delay the action. For example, to delay the screenshot action by 10 s:

gnome-screenshot -d 10

or

sleep 10;gnome-screenshot

Screenshots are placed under ~/Pictures

devav2
  • 37,290
15

You can use shutter program to take screenshot from terminal.Run the below commands in terminal to install shutter,

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:shutter/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install shutter

To take a screenshot of active window,

shutter -a -o shot.png -e

To take a screenshot of whole display,

shutter -f -o shot.png -e

The screenshots taken are stored in the home directory.

For more options run shutter --help command,

Usage:
    shutter [options]

Options:
    Example 1
            shutter -a -p=myprofile --min_at_startup

    Example 2
            shutter -s=100,100,300,300 -e

    Example 3
            shutter --window=.*firefox.*

    Example 4
            shutter --web=http://shutter-project.org/ -e

  Capture Mode Options:
    -s, --select=[X,Y,WIDTH,HEIGHT]
            Capture an area of the screen. Providing X,Y,WIDTH,HEIGHT is
            optional.

    -f, --full
            Capture the entire screen.

    -w, --window=[NAME_PATTERN]
            Select a window to capture. Providing a NAME_PATTERN (Perl-style
            regex) ist optional.

    -a, --active
            Capture the current active window.

    --section
            Capture a section. You will be able to select any child window
            by moving the mouse over it.

    -m, --menu
            Capture a menu.

    -t, --tooltip
            Capture a tooltip.

    --web=[URL]
            Capture a webpage. Providing an URL ist optional.

    -r, --redo
            Redo last screenshot.

  Settings Options:
    -p, --profile=NAME
            Load a specific profile on startup.

    -o, --output=FILENAME
            Specify a filename to save the screenshot to (overwrites any
            profile-related setting).

            Supported image formats: You can save to any popular image
            format (e.g. jpeg, png, gif, bmp). Additionally it is possible
            to save to pdf, ps or svg.

            Please note: There are several wildcards available, like

             %Y = year
             %m = month
             %d = day
             %T = time
             $w = width
             $h = height
             $name = multi-purpose (e.g. window title)
             $nb_name = like $name but without blanks in resulting strings
             $profile = name of current profile
             $R = random char (e.g. $RRRR = ag4r)
             %NN = counter

            The string is interpretted by strftime. See "man strftime" for
            more examples.

            As an example: shutter -f -e -o './%y-%m-%d_$w_$h.png' would
            create a file named '11-10-28_1280_800.png' in the current
            directory.

  Application Options:
    -h, --help
            Prints a brief help message and exits.

    -v, --version
            Prints version information.

    -d, --debug
            Prints a lot of debugging information to STDOUT.

    --clear_cache
            Clears cache, e.g. installed plugins, at startup.

    --min_at_startup
            Starts Shutter minimized to tray.

    --disable_systray
            Disables systray icon.

    -e, --exit_after_capture
            Exit after the first capture has been made. This is useful when
            using Shutter in scripts.
Avinash Raj
  • 80,446
10

If you want to take a screenshot from a login-terminal (the one you open with Ctrl+Alt+F1) you can use the program fbgrab.

You can install it by typing sudo apt-get install fbcat.

Then take a screenshot of your login-terminal, type in your login-terminal:

$ sudo fbgrab my_screenshot

my_screenshot is saved under the current directory.

chriad
  • 201
9

I tried using ImageMagick import but it didn't work for me when using KDE Desktop Effects. ImageMagick import has output transparent window borders in black instead of properly combining foreground alpha and background.

I also tried using X11 xwd and NetPBM xwdtopnm but that also didn't work for me, NetPBM xwdtopnm couldn't properly deal with the multiscreen output of xwd because I have a Xinerama setup.

But combining X11 xwd with ImageMagick convert worked just fine for me:

xwd -silent -root | convert xwd:- screenshot.png

Or, if you have a Dual-FullHD Xinerama setup, like me, and want the first screen only:

xwd -silent -root | convert xwd:- -crop 1920x1080+0+0 test.png

For the second screen only:

xwd -silent -root | convert xwd:- -crop 1920x1080+1920+0 +repage test.png
4

No installation needed. Customized to your needs.

  1. Place the following command in a file named screenshot.bash anywhere you want.

    gnome-screenshot -a -c -f /home/<username>/Desktop/Screenshot_$(date +"%0y%0m%0d_%0H%0M%0S").png
    
  2. Copy the location of this file.

  3. Go to "Keyboard Shortcuts" and create a new one by hitting + at the end of the list

    enter image description here

muru
  • 207,228
3

I'm using ubuntu 13.10 and I have a script that I just wrote which may be helpful. I see this questions been answered but my solution requires no additional installs.

#!/bin/bash
curDate=$(date)
imgExtension=".png"
imgName=$curDate$imgExtension
imgDirectory="/path/to/desires/save/directory/"
imgSavePath=$imgDirectory$imgName
gnome-screenshot --file="$imgSavePath"

This code will save the screenshot without popping up the dialogue window. It uses the current time for a file name to avoid any duplicate filename issues.

1

If you need just to peep into a remote computer via ssh, you can use this script.

#!/bin/bash
computer='JohnBrownsBody@10.0.0.11'
password='LiesAMoulderingInTheGrave'
path='/tmp/'
file='peepshow.png'

[ "$(whereis sshpass | cut -d: -f2)" == "" ] && sudo apt install sshpass [ "$(whereis feh | cut -d: -f2)" == "" ] && sudo apt install feh

sshpass -p "$password" ssh $computer "export DISPLAY=:0; scrot $path$file;" sshpass -p "$password" scp -r "$computer:$path$file" $path

gpicview "$path$file"

feh "$path$file" echo "... and his soul is marching on in $path$file! Peek at it!"

xerostomus
  • 1,060
1

On Linux you also have the delicious flameshot

Which not only behaves nicely on interactive work, but will also serve you as a command-line friend.

Imagine you want a precise portion of the screen:

  1. start a shell
  2. throw flameshot gui -g in order to have your region coordinate
  3. validate the screenshot CTRL+C probably
  4. then do all in one without interaction: flameshot gui --region 1771x1019+1940+120 -s -p pipo.png

explanations:

  • gui start gui mode
  • --region crop the given screen region you got from -g at step 2
  • -s dont wait for any user validation, save it automatically
  • -p path to the file or folder to save it. ⚠️ it doesn't overwrite the filename but you get an pipo_1.png with suffix (and so on). The generated filename is printed on stderr

have fun.

Sylvain
  • 221