
Imager::Screenshot - screenshot to an Imager image

use Imager::Screenshot 'screenshot';
# whole screen
my $img = screenshot();
# Win32 window
my $img2 = screenshot(hwnd => $hwnd);
# X11 window
my $img3 = screenshot(display => $display, id => $window_id);
# X11 tools
my $display = Imager::Screenshot::x11_open();
Imager::Screenshot::x11_close($display);
# test for win32 support
if (Imager::Screenshot->have_win32) { ... }
# test for x11 support
if (Imager::Screenshot->have_x11) { ... }

Imager::Screenshot captures either a desktop or a specified window and returns the result as an Imager image.
Currently the image is always returned as a 24-bit image.
Retrieve a screenshot under Win32, if window handle is zero, capture the desktop.
By default, window decorations are not captured, if the decor parameter is set to true then window decorations are included.
Retrieve a screenshot under X11, if id is zero, capture the root window. display object is a integer version of an X11 Display * , if this isn't supplied screenshot() will attempt connect to the the display specified by $ENV{DISPLAY}.
Note: taking a screenshot of a remote display is slow.
Retrieve a screenshot of a Tk widget, under Win32 or X11, depending on how Tk has been built.
If Tk was built for X11 then the display parameter applies.
If Tk was built for Win32 then the decor parameter applies.
If no id, hwnd or widget parameter is supplied:
You can also supply the following parameters to retrieve a subset of the window:
If left or top is negative, then treat that as from the right/bottom edge of the window.
If right ot bottom is zero or negative then treat as from the right/bottom edge of the window.
So setting all 4 values to 0 retrieves the whole window.
# a 10-pixel wide right edge of the window my $right_10 = screenshot(left => -10, ...); # the top-left 100x100 portion of the window my $topleft_100 = screenshot(right => 100, bottom => 100, ...); # 10x10 pixel at the bottom right corner my $bott_right_10 = screenshot(left => -10, top => -10, ...);
Returns true if Win32 support is available.
Returns true if X11 support is available.
Attempts to open a connection to either the display name in $ENV{DISPLAY} or the supplied display name. Returns a value suitable for the display parameter of screenshot, or undef.
Closes a display returned by Imager::Screenshot::x11_open().

screenshot() sets a number of tags in the images it returns, these are:
To cheaply get the window size you can capture a single pixel:
my $im = screenshot(right => 1, bottom => 1); my $window_width = $im->tags(name => 'ss_window_width'); my $window_height = $im->tags(name => 'ss_window_height');

It's possible to have more than one grab driver available, for example, Win32 and X11, and which is used can have an effect on the result.
Under Win32, if there's a screesaver running, then you grab the results of the screensaver.
Grabbing the root window on a rootless server (eg. Cygwin/X) may not grab the background that you see. In fact, when I tested under Cygwin/X I got the xterm window contents even when the Windows screensaver was running. The root window captured appeared to be that generated by my window manager.
Grabbing a window with other windows overlaying it will capture the content of those windows where they hide the window you want to capture. You may want to raise the window to top. This may be a security concern if the overlapping windows contain any sensitive information - true for any screen capture.

Imager::Screenshot is licensed under the same terms as Perl itself.

Future plans include:

Tony Cook <tonyc@cpan.org>