Tap or click the window that you want to capture. (The screenshot is saved in the Screenshots folder in the Pictures folder.) Press the PrntScrn key. On tablets, press the Windows logo button + the volume down button together. You can also click on the screenshot preview that appears to make any edits or save it to your computer as a JPEG, PNG or other. Press the Windows logo key + PrntScrn key together. To take the delayed screenshot, simply hit Win-Shift-S, which will then be copied to your clipboard.
This will give you a bit of time to set up whatever it is you're attempting to screenshot and might make it easier than taking the shot manually. You can choose between a 3-, 5- and 10-second delay. Give the file a new name and try to open it again to see if it can open. The first troubleshooting step you can take is to rename the JPG or JPEG file without changing its file extension. However, with this full version of the Snipping Tool, you can choose any of the four snipping options (rectangular, freeform, window and fullscreen) and then choose a delay option. If you can’t open JPG files in Windows 10, try the 11 fixes below to solve this issue. In Snipping Tool, if you click on New you'll open the mini Snipping Tool menu (like in the section before), where you can then choose between several different snips.
To use it, type in Snipping Tool in the Search feature and open the application to take a screenshot. The Snipping Tool comes built into Windows 11, and is the same tool used in the previous section, except with a few tiny additions. Use the Snipping Tool to take delayed screenshots You can delay your screenshot by 3, 5 or 10 seconds.