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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    Taking an actual screenshot?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help and Support
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    • R
      RetroResolution @UDb23
      last edited by RetroResolution

      @UDb23 hi,
      If you use raspi2png (I covered this earlier in the thread I think - it was a while ago!), it grabs the entire GPU frame buffer as a .PNG file, so you'll get everything that is on-screen.

      [Edit: 4th post down in this thread, covers installing and using raspi2png]

      If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

      RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

      UDb23U 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • FloobF
        Floob @UDb23
        last edited by

        @UDb23 You can keep the bezel in RGUI with an option in there - its under the overlay section, and something like "keep overlay in RGUI"
        Not sure if that will help include it in the screenshot though.

        Please read the Docs before asking a new question.
        RetroPie Help Guides: https://goo.gl/3gcNsT

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • briankrossB
          briankross
          last edited by

          Just wanted to jump in with a quick question.

          Is "raspi2png" the only option if not using retroarch based emulators? (I hope I said that right!)

          • Brian
          R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • R
            RetroResolution @briankross
            last edited by

            @briankross it all depends on the emulator. The Atari ST emulator, Hatari, for example, has an in-built screen-grab (and Audi/video recording) facility. The Atari 8-bit emulator, Atari800, provides a screen shot feature.

            If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

            RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

            briankrossB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • briankrossB
              briankross @RetroResolution
              last edited by

              @RetroResolution said in Taking an actual screenshot?:

              @briankross it all depends on the emulator. The Atari ST emulator, Hatari, for example, has an in-built screen-grab (and Audi/video recording) facility. The Atari 8-bit emulator, Atari800, provides a screen shot feature.

              Ah, nice thanks! My goal is to assign a button on the console to take a screenshot. I'll continue researching.

              • Brian
              R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • R
                RetroResolution @briankross
                last edited by

                @briankross cool, but bear in mind that for non libretro-core (non-retroarch) emulators assigning custom controller buttons can be tricky - it all depends in whether the emulator allows custom configuration (or if a controller-to-keypress tool can be used).
                For the Atari800 emulator I located a retroarch port that somebody shared on github, compiled that on my Pi, and integrated it into emulation station so I could easily grab screens and record footage using retroarch.

                If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

                RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • edmaul69E
                  edmaul69 @RetroResolution
                  last edited by

                  @RetroResolution where does raspi2png save the screenshots to?

                  R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • R
                    RetroResolution @edmaul69
                    last edited by RetroResolution

                    @edmaul69 hi,
                    It will store them in whichever directory you're in when you run the command; if you installed raspi2png following the instructions in the fourth post in this (long) thread, you can run raspi2png from any location:

                    For ease of use, either add an alias, or copy the program into the /usr/local/bin directory:

                    sudo cp -a raspi2png/raspi2png /usr/local/bin

                    You can also provide a filename with the -p parameter, which probably (I haven't tried this) also accepts a path, e.g to save to a 'pngs' directory within your home directory:

                    raspi2png -p ~/pngs/screengrab.png

                    If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

                    RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • UDb23U
                      UDb23 @RetroResolution
                      last edited by

                      @RetroResolution Will try it out, thanks.

                      R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • R
                        RetroResolution @UDb23
                        last edited by

                        @UDb23 no problem!

                        If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

                        RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • EkstremeE
                          Ekstreme
                          last edited by

                          @RetroResolution Thanks mate, helped me take a proper active screenshot! Was exactly what I was looking for!

                          R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • R
                            RetroResolution @Ekstreme
                            last edited by

                            @Ekstreme Hi,
                            Glad to have helped!

                            If a post has helped you, please encourage the author by up-voting via the ^ icon located in the bottom-right corner.

                            RetroResolution.com - Adventures in retro gaming on original hardware and via emulation with RetroPie on the Raspberry Pi.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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