Documentation:Snapshots

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Revision as of 23:04, 14 July 2011 by Skierpage (talk | contribs) (in my VLC 1.1.10 in Windows Vista, the snapshot key is Shift-S ! I give the two paths to Hotkey settings, they might be different for other interfaces.)
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VLC User Guide

Quick Start Guide
Installing VLC
History
Usage
Interface
Open Media
Audio
Video
Playback
Playlist
Subtitles
Video and Audio Filters
Snapshots
Hotkeys
Uninstalling VLC
Troubleshooting
Advanced usage
Using VLC inside a webpage
Command line
Alternative Interfaces
Misc

Appendix
Building Pages for the HTTP Interface
Format String
Building Lua Playlist Scripts
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There are two ways to take snapshots (i.e., screenshots or frame grabs) with VLC:

  1. To take a snapshot go to the Snapshot menu item in the Video tab
  2. Press the snapshot hotkey
    • Linux / Unix: Ctrl-Alt-s
    • Windows (Qt interface): Shift-s
    • Mac OS X: Command-Alt-s

When a snapshot is taken, it will briefly preview as a thumbnail with its filename and then fade away.

To change the hotkey, go to Tools -> Preferences. If "Show settings" is set to Simple, click Hotkeys; if "Show settings" is set All, navigate to Interface -> Hotkeys settings. Set the hotkey for Take video snapshot.

Snapshot location, format and name

The snapshot location depends upon your operating system:

  • Windows: My Documents\My Pictures\
  • Windows Vista and 7: C:\Users\Username\Pictures
  • Linux / Unix: $(HOME)/.vlc/
  • Mac OS X: Desktop/


The default format for snapshots is PNG, but this may be changed to JPEG. Also, the default name for snapshots is vlcsnap- followed by a timestamp that is not the time of the frame in the video you're viewing, but rather the current name.

The location, format and name of snapshots may be changed in the Preferences menu item in the Tools tab. Also, you may substitute other text for vlcsnap- in the Video snapshot file prefix and you may choose to have snapshots numbered sequentially (i.e., 000001, 000002, 000003, and so on) instead of with a timestamp.

As of version 0.9.0, you may even use variables in the text used for the filename. For example, $T (must be upper case) will insert the video's time code into the file name. If you were to change the prefix to Friends-$T- while watching a DVD of Friends, then the snapshot filenames would look something like this: Friends-00_05_21-00004.png . This indicates a snapshot taken at 5 minutes and 21 seconds into the video; and it was the number 00004 snapshot of the day.

For a full list of variables, please see Documentation:Play HowTo/Format String.

Basic snapshots config.png

Configuring snapshot options under Windows