Button: Prtscn
One day, the Great Architect (known to some as "Microsoft") decided Sir PrtScn needed a partner. They introduced the . When they held hands— Win + PrtScn —a magical flash would dim the screen, and the image wouldn't just sit in the Clipboard; it would fly straight into a secret vault called the Screenshots Folder .
The name is a glorious fossil from the 1980s. Back when monitors were green or amber and dot matrix printers screamed like distressed robots, pressing PrtScn literally sent the contents of your screen to the printer. Yes, people once printed their command-line interfaces. Today, unless you enjoy wasting ink, it does something far more magical: it copies an invisible photograph of your entire screen to the Windows Clipboard. prtscn button
: Copies the entire desktop view to the system clipboard. One day, the Great Architect (known to some
Press it alone. Nothing happens. No flash, no sound. Yet, secretly, you've just captured every pixel. Open MS Paint, Ctrl+V, and boom — a perfect screenshot from 2023 appears. The name is a glorious fossil from the 1980s
: Export your project file to your preferred folder. File Management
Recently, the Great Architect changed the laws of the land. Now, when you tap Sir PrtScn, he doesn't just grab the whole screen—he summons a magic overlay. He lets you carve out exactly what you want, like a surgeon of pixels.