I'm Mark Erickson and this is a Firefox quick tip
Press shift+f2 to open the command-line and enter 'screenshot --fullpage' to take a screenshot of the entire current webpage.
I'm Mark Erickson, and this has been a Firefox quick tip
THANKS MR ERIXON
TOTALLY NEEDED THAT
I know this and use it fairly often. I just don't understand why the fuck it needs to add "-fullpage" to the filename you specify.
>screenshot --fullpage test.png
>test-fullpage.png
>>59637629
how do I do it in chrome mark erickson ?
>not just using Page Shot from Test Pilot
>he probably doesn't even use Tab Center
wtf I love firefox now
>>59637704
you don't even need to specify a filename, it automatically saves to downloads named by the current date/time.
and --fullpage means it captures the whole site not just the visible area.
these are two separate arguments for the command
don't know what the fuck are you talking about.
i love you no homo mark erickson
>>59637760
>you don't even need to specify a filename, it automatically saves to downloads named by the current date/time.
I'd rather not have my images named that way. It's good for some that you can choose your own filename.
>and --fullpage means it captures the whole site not just the visible area.
But it's pointless to add that fact to a filename you specify. I can sort of see the point of doing it with the default naming convention, but it's a minor inconvenience for me.
Might depend on your use case. I'd be happy if there were an option in about:config for it. I'm not familiar enough with the ecosystem to write my own extension for it either. I'll just have to live with it. ;'(