![]() ![]() What if my app's window shows snap layouts but isn't snapping properly? If your app uses Electron, update to the v13 stable release of Electron to enable snap layouts. Return ::DefWindowProcW(window, msg, wParam, lParam) If (::PtInRect(&m_maximizeButtonRect, point)) If the point is in your maximize button then return HTMAXBUTTON ::MapWindowPoints(nullptr, window, &point, 1) GET_X_LPARAM and GET_Y_LPARAM are defined in windowsx.h LRESULT CALLBACK TestWndProc(HWND window, UINT msg, WPARAM wParam, LPARAM lParam) Use the Windows App SDK windowing APIs (see Manage app windows) and have the platform draw and implement the caption buttons for you.įor Win32 apps, make sure you are responding appropriately to WM_NCHITTEST (with a return value of HTMAXBUTTON for the maximize/restore button). If you have a custom title bar, then you can: If your app's main window has the maximize caption button available but does not show snap layouts, it may be because you've customized your caption buttons or title bar in a way that prevents it. Why doesn't my app show the snap layouts menu? This topic describes how to make sure your app shows the menu with snap layouts if the system does not show it automatically. Snap layouts will appear automatically for most apps, but some desktop apps may not show snap layouts. If the app's window has the maximize caption button available, the system will automatically show snap layouts when a user hovers the mouse over the window's maximize button. Snap layouts are tailored to the current screen size and orientation, including support for three side-by-side windows on large landscape screens and top/bottom stacked windows on portrait screens. After invoking the menu that shows the available layouts, users can click on a zone in a layout to snap a window to that particular zone and then use Snap Assist to finish building an entire layout of windows. Snap layouts are easily accessible by hovering the mouse over a window's maximize button or pressing Win + Z. Please tell me what you think about that.Snap layouts are a new Windows 11 feature to help introduce users to the power of window snapping. ![]() Take a look at : All videos shown on the website are exported using the lossless FLV codec. Lossless means that it is pixel by pixel equal to the original, which means no compression artifacts. FLV supports a lossless screenvideo codec which is of course supported by DemoRecorder. Since many of you mentioned the ability to import to Flash-projects: The FLV format is perfect for that. What I can probably do rather fast is a pre-version which can only record X11-apps. But I’ll do my best to get this out ASAP. Now, development will of course take some time. If somebody pays or gives me an Intel Mac loaded with all necessary development tools I will start development as soon as I receive the Mac and you will get DemoRecorder licenses equal to the value of the Mac in return. It will also support the same output formats as the Linux version. I may create a version of DemoRecorder for the Mac. He uses my product DemoRecorder which is a screen recorder for Linux which can produce production quality videos in different formats including FLV, AVI, MPEG2, … Jonathan Buys from pointed me to this discussion. The biggest downfall of the current options is editing - there’s no way to preview the screencast you just created, overlay some captions, intro and outro text, and cut out some of the dead video).Ĭan I get an amen? Better yet, can I get a product? All wrapped up in a nice UI too, of course. Basic screen video capture with a few simple compression options, audio recording, caption/graphic overlay support, simple video editing (cut, duplicate, slow down, just the basics), and export to Quicktime or Flash. One of those guys (or both together) could be our only hope. I’d love to see something from Panic or Iconfactory. And it’s not a Universal app either so it doesn’t work on Intel (it doesn’t even work in Rosetta either). Snapz Pro is about the best there is, and it’s not bad, but it’s… well… it feels like there should be something better. It’s sorta surprising, but there’s no great screencast app for the Mac. ![]() Where’s the killer screencast app for the Mac? Jason 61 comments
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