This extension is run by an independent developer. *NEW:* crop, annotate, and add your favorite emojis to any screenshot with the new premium editor!
For the rare scenario where your page is too large for Chrome to store in one image, it will let you know and split it up into images in separate tabs.Įxport your result to PNG, JPEG, or various PDF paper sizes-all configurable from the extension’s options. In order to screenshot the entire page it must scroll to each visible part, so please be patient as it quickly assembles all the pieces. If you encounter an issue, please report it via the customer support flag icon on the capture page, so we can improve the extension for you and everyone else who uses it.
The advanced screen capture technology handles complex pages-including inner scrollable elements as well as embedded iframes-unlike any other extension.
*No bloat, no ads, no unnecessary permissions, just a simple way to turn a full web page into an image.*
Click on the extension icon (or press Alt+Shift+P), watch the extension capture each part of the page, and be transported to a new tab of your screenshot where you can download it as an image or PDF or even just drag it to your desktop. However, although you might get some important fixes, and the latest Chromium core, we also find the Dev version to be fairly unstable.Capture a screenshot of your current page in entirety and reliably-without requesting any extra permissions! The simplest way to take a full page screenshot of your current browser window. If you really feel you need the latest Chrome, this is for you. If you do go down the Dev path, be prepared to enjoy a much less stable experience, although in return you’ll be testing cutting-edge features that won’t be available to other users for weeks if not months.Ĭhrome 82 is now in the Dev channel. Note that the Dev channel and should be used with some caution.
Unlike Canary, you can’t run Google Chrome Dev side-by-side with the stable, final version, although you could fashion your own clumsy workaround by running Chrome Dev alongside the portable version of Chrome. That said, Chrome Dev obviously remains a key part of the Chrome development cycle, as it’s the first release specifically designed for wider public consumption. It’s one step forward from the untested nightly builds of Chrome Canary, but it’s still a long way from the finished article, never mind the more reliable beta. Think of the Dev channel of Google Chrome as an alpha build, Chrome’s equivalent of Firefox Aurora.