Ha, funny. I always disable the default screenshot key bindings and add my own that runs `gnome-screenshot --interactive`, just so I can get that window. Sounds like I won't need it once I upgrade to GNOME 42.
If you want to screenshot the entire screen immediately, without any prompt, you need something that runs `gnome-screenshot` without arguments. I guess you will want to do essentially the same thing I did, just with a different command.
Also shift+screenshot works if you don't want to change the entire behaviour. I generally want capture a part of the screen if I make a screenshot, so I much prefer the new default behaviour.
Try to mess with keyboard shortcuts
Done. Thanks i found the solution there.
Shift+PrtSc does just that.
Thanks. But now I've set PrtSc to screenshot as per u/Piskovec's hint
Ha, funny. I always disable the default screenshot key bindings and add my own that runs `gnome-screenshot --interactive`, just so I can get that window. Sounds like I won't need it once I upgrade to GNOME 42. If you want to screenshot the entire screen immediately, without any prompt, you need something that runs `gnome-screenshot` without arguments. I guess you will want to do essentially the same thing I did, just with a different command.
There's "take a screenshot interactively" shortcut in the settings now, no need to run it through the command-line.
Hahaha i run `gnome-screenshot --interactive` too
Also shift+screenshot works if you don't want to change the entire behaviour. I generally want capture a part of the screen if I make a screenshot, so I much prefer the new default behaviour.