


If you're interested, check it SDK 14.2.7.0 Improved: - PDF rendering engine - Smart Redaction engine accuracy - KVP engine accuracy - Table Processing accuracy - PDF parsing of malformed documents - PDF digital signature memory management for large documents Fixed: - an issue that prevented EML from being rendered on *.API assemblies - PDF OCG print and export states handling GdPicture.NET SDK 14.2.6.0 Improved: - Smart Redaction engine accuracy - KVP engine accuracy - Table Processing accuracy - Added new method `SetSignatureAlternateTitle` to the GdPicturePDF class GdPicture.NET SDK 14.2.5.0 Improved: - office formats rendering engine - Smart redaction engine accuracy - KVP engine accuracy - OCR engine accuracy - Table processing accuracy - PDF rendering engine - PDF linearizer engine - PDF text extraction engine - Fixes EML/MSG rendering issue on linux GdPicture.NET SDK 14.2.4.0 Improved: - office formats rendering engine - Smart redaction engine accuracy - KVP engine accuracy - Table processing accuracy - OCR engine accuracy - MRC engine accuracy - Fixes HTML to PDF on linux issue GdPicture.NET SDK 14.2.3.0 Improved: - Table processing accuracy and speed - KVP engine accuracy - Smart redaction engine accuracy - PDF/A validation and conversion engines - PDF OCG flattening performance - Fixes some instabilities loading. Snipaste doesn't have the power of a full-strength screen capture tool, but the in-place editing and the ability to paste images onto the screen as floating windows are major pluses. If you'd like to see how a toolbar or some other UI element looks on a program, this allows you to paste an image onto the screen and view it in-place. Unusually, you can also paste the clipboard image - whether it's saved by Snipaste or not - back onto the screen as a floating window. When you're finished, the annotated capture may be copied to the clipboard, or saved as an image file. Instead it overlays the captured area of the screen and you're able to draw shapes or arrows on it, highlight areas, apply mosaic or blurring effects, add new text, and generally edit it in place.

Unlike other screenshot tools, your capture doesn't appear in another window. You press the capture hotkey (F1 by default, oddly), move the mouse around the interface, elements are highlighted as you hover over them, and left-clicking snips that area. Selection is automatic, and you might have seen something similar with other capture tools. The program enables capturing UI elements: a button, a panel, a menu, maybe the entire application window. Snipaste is a portable screenshot tool aimed at developers and designers.
