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Monosnap right click context menu
Monosnap right click context menu





monosnap right click context menu
  1. Monosnap right click context menu pro#
  2. Monosnap right click context menu windows#
monosnap right click context menu monosnap right click context menu

All three checksums would display, and after I decide I'm done looking at it I press a single key and the DOS window closes. I then want all three files passed to a batch file I write that does something like offĪ single DOS window would pop up, run pass each file to the cksum program which basically emulates the Linux program of the same name.

Monosnap right click context menu windows#

I want to be able to use Windows Explorer, highlight several files (right now they have the same extension, but Id like that not to matter), then right click on the selected files, and select a context menu item to "process" them all.įor example, I want to right click on 3 files within a particular directory, f1.txt, f2.txt, and f3.txt, then select the contect menu item "calculate cksums". I will often create context menu items to allow me to right click on a particular file type and easily perform a particular function on that file. I mostly know what I'm doing,īut not always sure what the term for it is. If I could get resize and optional non-screenshot-float I'd be using Snappy all the time, and I'd give it 5 stars.Please forgive me if I am mis-using smom terms here.

Monosnap right click context menu pro#

Also, one nice advantage of SnapNDrag Pro is that when you drag out a screneshot to the finder/email/iMessage you can set the image to automatically downsize to 75%/50%/25% of the original, and even specify the size of an optional black border. But sometimes I just end up launching SnapNDrag Pro instead of using Snappy already in my menubar, just because I don't want to deal with closing those floating screenshots. It's very convenient, and MUCH faster than Capto. I tend to use screenshot apps to make images I can drag as files into emails or iMessage, and that means I have to close those floating screenshots every time! (If there's a way to turn it off please let me know.) It's quite good, and getting better (although I'm a little leery of the upcoming cross-platform sync subscription that is apparently coming soon).įor me, the biggest miss is the feature that people seem to like the most: the immediate floating of the snapped image. I own this app, along with Jing, Capto and SnapNDrag Pro. And with iCloud enabled, you have them synced across all Apple devices.

monosnap right click context menu

Organize - With the Snaps Library, the built in screenshot organizer, you can easily keep track of all your snaps.So far we've got Snappy Link, Email, Facebook, Twitter, Imgur, Pinterest, Dropbox and Evernote. Share - Right-click on the snap and select how you want to share it.Using annotations you can highlight what is important and take notes right on the snap. Annotate - Draw, write, erase and undo.Command+Tab breaks context and focus, Snappy fixes that. The snap is always on top so you can focus on the content. Snap and Pin - Snap something from Window A so you can reference it in Window B.Once the snap is created, you can easily annotate and share it. The main interaction allows you to capture a screen area and automatically pins it above all windows, always on top, always visible - just like a memory you want to keep in focus. Snappy (was SnappyApp) lets you take always-on-top snaps of your screen, annotate, share encrypted with self-destruct, everything neatly organized in your library and synced across your devices.







Monosnap right click context menu