A TUAW staffer recently asked if there were a way to snapshot the exact same region of the screen over and over at timed intervals without buying third-party software.
There is, but it depends on your comfort with the command line. If you’re experienced in Unix scripting, read on. If not, you may want to investigate standalone screen-capture apps instead.
I pointed him to /usr/sbin/screencapture. This built-in OS X utility allows you to specify a screen region to capture. For example, to capture a 50×200 rectangle starting at the point 200, 200, you’d say:
% /usr/sbin/screencapture -R”200,200,50,200″ ~/Desktop/foo.png
You can easily apply a Unix shell script to create numbered output files. Unix commands will also enable you to sleep and repeat the capture requests over time.
The utility is Retina-ready. Since it captures in points (and not pixels), the results are twice as big in each dimension when run on Retina systems.
Timed command-line screenshots originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Mon, 20 May 2013 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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