


That is, by using CTRLcommandshift4 you can select the marked up image and take a screenshot but instead of it being saved to your drive, itll just be copied to the clipboard allowing you to use commandV to paste it. If there is something in the file, just move the insertion point to the end of the file, then copy and paste the following text into the editor: function pss () ¬ĭefault button 1 with title "File I/O Error. Or, if what youre wanting to do is copy it to the clipboard, add the CTRL key to the keyboard shortcut. When the editor opens, you may have only an empty file - that's fine. Start the Terminal app, and then from the shell ( zsh) prompt ( %) start the editor of your choice to open the ~/.zshrc file in your "home" ( $HOME) directory.
SNAG A SCREENSHOT TO CLIPBOARD MAC MAC
The ability to save Mac screenshots directly to the system clipboard is a. It uses only resources that are native to macOS 10.15.4, and there are no work-arounds offered. Press the Control () key on the keyboard, then hold either the Shift ()-Command ()-3 combination to take a screenshot of the entire screen or the Shift ()-Command ()-4 shortcut if you want to send an image of part of the screen to the clipboard. As there were already answers to this question that required only minor adaptation, I relied heavily upon them - this one, and this one in particular, both posted by answer requires use of the command line. Or use Universal Clipboard to paste it on another Apple device. You can then paste the screenshot somewhere else. I've tested it with screenshots on my 10.15.4 system, and it worked reliably in my (limited) testing. To copy a screenshot to the Clipboard, press and hold the Control key while you take the screenshot. Nevertheless, I've finally got a correct answer, so I'm going to post it. My earlier answers were wrong, and while troubleshooting, new (and likely better) answers have been posted.
