Simple, light, modern tool for screenshooting.
Project description
A simple UI for handling screenshots.
Installation
ArchLinux: yay install shotman.
Others: pip install shotman.
Setup
You’ll generally want to bind shotman to some hotkeys. I keep this in my sway settings:
# Screenshots: # Super+P: Current window # Super+Shift+p: Select area # Super+Alt+p Current output # Super+Ctrl+p Select a window bindsym Mod4+p exec shotman active bindsym Mod4+Shift+p exec shotman area bindsym Mod4+Mod1+p exec shotman output bindsym Mod4+Ctrl+p exec shotman window
Note: the above supercedes the recommendation given by grimshot. Make sure you don’t have both on your config file.
I also recommend adding settings to position it on-screen. If you skip this, the window will show up centred, since Wayland clients cannot control their position:
for_window [title="shotman"] move position 30 30
It is currently not clear if this application should be exceptional and use a privileged API or not.
Usage
shotman runs and immediately shows the screenshot. Note that, since shotman uses grimshot under the hood, you image is saved to disk already by default.
Actions
You can execute the same actions with a mouse _or_ keyboard:
Done: Exits. The screenshot images remains on disk. - Primary Keybinding: Esc. - Secundary Keybindings: Ctrl+q, Ctrl+w, q.
Delete: Deletes the image file and exists immediately. - Keybinding: d. - Secundary Keybindings: Delete, Ctrl+d.
Copy: Copies the screenshot image to the clipboard. See caveats below. - Keybinding: Ctrl+C.
If there’s a good, lightweight image editor that runs well on Wayland, I’d be happy to add an Edit button that opens the screenshot image in it.
Caveats
If you’re not using a clipboard manager, any copied image will be lost after closing the window.
There are plants to keep the application running in the background until it loses the clipboard handle to work around this.
Licence
shotman is licensed under the ISC licence. See LICENCE for details.
Project details
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