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Best licecap tool
Best licecap tool







best licecap tool
  1. #BEST LICECAP TOOL INSTALL#
  2. #BEST LICECAP TOOL FULL#
  3. #BEST LICECAP TOOL MAC#

Utilities such as Jing capture in a Flash-based format, but I have mixed feelings about requiring Flash, no matter how common it may be. Here’s where I would embed a video of me doing that, but you can’t start a new screen recording while doing a screen recording. Load it up and select “File”, then “New Screen Recording”.

#BEST LICECAP TOOL MAC#

If you need a video to do your app justice, by all means, let me introduce you to this neat tool included on your Mac for free: QuickTime Player. These images are also saved to your desktop, time-stamped, but they are formatted “Screen Shot ”. To capture a partial screenshot, hit Command+ Shift+ 4 and draw what to capture with the crosshairs.

#BEST LICECAP TOOL FULL#

Need to capture the Simulator among other windows? You capture the full screen with Command+ Shift+ 3 and can then crop to your desired size. The easiest shots can be done in the iOS Simulator, a simple Command+ S (File: Save Screen Shot) will save a PNG result of your app to the desktop. If you really just need a static screenshot, don’t forget the baked-in offerings. I found Gifsicle, a command line utility, fixed this for me quite nicely. But, once you edit in Preview, any infinite looping you had will be gone. From there you can selecting the offending frames and hit delete. If you find you have a bunch of extra frames in your animation, open your GIF in Preview. (You can also pause and resume during a recording.) Trimming the result After everything is complete, simply hit “Stop” to save the result.

best licecap tool

When you are all set hit “Save” and you will get a 3-2-1 countdown in the title bar before recording begins. You will also have a few options here that may be of interest, such as showing a circle for mouse button presses or loop repeat count. Once you are all set, hit the record button. When capturing skinny views with exact dimensions, such as the iOS Simulator in portrait, you need to enter your height first or the field disappears before you can give it a value. Doing so highlights one frustration with the program. At half scale, I find setting LICEcap to 318×564 then lining up with a top corner works quite well. For most apps, trimming those pixels doesn’t seem to be a loss. For a full-app capture, you will end up getting the bottom rounded corners of the window unless you crop a few pixels. Unless you want a huge recording, you probably want to scale the Simulator to 50% with Command+ 3. For some animations, file size can get substantial fairly quickly. For my UIGravityBehavior recipe, practically ideal for GIF compression, it wasn’t a big difference from 5fps to 30fps. The resulting file size variation from FPS settings will depend heavily on your recording length and the complexity of the graphics. For representative purposes, it seemed I needed fewer FPS than I thought. You can also set exact pixel measurements with the two bottom inputs.Īfter you set your capture area, you can set a maximum frames per second (FPS) as well. It can be maddening to adjust it just right if you are shooting for specific pixels. You pull the various window edges and corners as needed to frame your target. Instead, what the program frames is what will be captured. LICEcap loads as a transparent window, looking eerily as if something failed to render. With LICEcap, you capture an arbitrary portion of the screen, so you can capture just a portion of your app all the way to the full simulator with your Twitter feed rolling in the background around it. There may be a tool that is better at that, but you will probably compromise file size for fidelity.

#BEST LICECAP TOOL INSTALL#

One thing to notice, these GIFs are not a great way to capture complex color palettes like the gradients in the install image folder. In fact, here’s LICEcap’s capture of me installing LICEcap. LICEcap, from Cockos Incorporated, is a quick disk image install. While the name sounds slightly…off, it definitely gets the job done. While I use these methods for my Xamarin.iOS creations, they apply equally to native apps and most anything running on a Mac. That said, if you know a better way to do this, toss a comment out there I’d love to hear about it. Here is the method I used to make the images for my Xamarin UIGravityBehavior recipe. If your app thrives on animation, especially the new UIKit Dynamics fun, you will need more than one frame to portray what your app does: enter the animated GIF, mother of all awesomeness. Showing the coolness of your iOS app in a web format can be very difficult, depending on what about your app makes it shine.









Best licecap tool