
You can then open them from the Clipboard in Preview to save them in your preferred format. Open the images (saved to the desktop) in Preview and export them in another format, or remember to use the Space shortcuts listed above to save them to Clipboard in the first place. Grab saves them as TIFF by default, while shortcuts capture PNG images. There's no easy way to change image formats when taking a screenshot. That is why you can see the pointer in that shot. Select one of these and the pointer will appear where it is located when the picture is taken. This offers a range of pointer icons (as shown to the left). To achieve this, launch the Grab app (hidden in Utilities) and select Grab Preferences.

You might want to include your cursor within the screenshot. In camera mode you can just click on the window you want an image of to highlight and capture it. The cursor will swap between the crosshair and a camera icon when you do. When you press ⌘+⇧+4 to grab an image you can toggle between an image you select using a crosshair or a full-window snap by keeping those keys depressed and pressing the Spacebar. ⌘+Ctrl+⇧+4 then Space: Capture a window, menu, desktop icon, or the menu bar and copy to the clipboard. ⌘+⇧+4 then Space: Capture a window, menu, desktop icon, or the menu bar and save as a file. ⌘+ctrl+⇧+4: Capture dragged area and copy to the clipboard. ⌘+⇧+4: Capture dragged area and save as a file. ⌘+Ctrl+⇧+3: Capture entire screen and copy to the clipboard. ⌘+⇧+3: Capture entire screen and save as a file.
#Macbook change default screenshot path mac#
These are the shortcuts to learn in order to get better screenshots on a Mac - don't forget you can cancel the shot by pressing Escape before you click:
