trex://capture trigger capture from screen.Trigger a user defined URL scheme (for integration with other apps).Detect and open URLs found in captured text.CLI tool /Applications/TRex.app/Contents/MacOS/cli/trex.Handy macOS menu bar app, with option to hide it.FeaturesĮvery feature in TRex works offline, no internet is needed. If you can see it on your screen - TRex can copy it. TRex is designed to be invisible and doesn't have any UI beyond the menu bar app and preferences. Please note, text editing application on the right is not part of TRex, this is Tot. There is no third step - extracted text is in your clipboard.Select an area of the screen you want to extract text from, just like taking a screenshot.Invoke "Capture" either through the menu bar or with a global configurable shortcut.TRex lives in the menu bar and available right where you need it the most: Forget retyping it manually with TRex, you can extract text from anywhere, and it is as easy as taking a screenshot. TextSniper is available from the developer’s website at $10, or $5 during the launch promo period.TRex captures any text right into your Clipboard with magic of OCR.īut what is OCR anyway? Imagine you have a PDF file or a Web page where you can't select the text, image with text on it, or even a YouTube video. For me, this makes it a no-brainer for any Mac user who ever needs to transcribe text, even occasionally (so long as you are running macOS Catalina). TextSniper has a one-off cost of $10, currently reduced to $5 as a launch promo. There may be pros and cons with the product itself, and there may be a need to balance price against value. Sometimes my review conclusion needs some thought. It’s been as close to perfect as any OCR system I’ve ever used, and able to cope with a massive range of formats. (Incidentally, if you’re an Andrew Scott fan, as I am, you can stream the play online.) Here’s a rare example of an error - omitting the colon in the first line:īut it still managed to read white-outline all-caps text on a colored background. It didn’t seem to matter what I threw at it, it always coped: Here are some examples of its performance with trickier graphics. In my initial use, despite going out of my way to find difficult examples for it, it’s been almost perfect. The really impressive thing to me is the combination of speed and accuracy. Here you can see the graphic and the captured text side-by-side. That statement took the form of a graphic.Īpple statement on terminating Epic’s developer account: “We won’t make an exception” /3a3L6meHfI- Mark Gurman August 18, 2020 Performanceįor example, when Apple announced that it would be terminating Epic Games’ developer account, Mark Gurman tweeted a statement from Apple. TextSnipe displays a brief thumbs-up icon and the words “Copied to clipboard.” Click into your document and CMD-V in the usual way, and the OCR’d text is pasted. Hit this combination, select the area of the screen you want to read, and… that’s it. The only visible sign you get is a small menu bar icon, but you now have a new screengrab option: Shift-CMD-2. What TextSniper does is allow you to select any words visible on your screen, no matter what its format, and to turn it into text, you can paste into any document. Company statements on Twitter are a common example, where they get around the character limit by posting an image of the statement…Ĭurrently, I read it aloud, using Siri dictation to automatically type the text, but it’s a clunky solution. One of the more annoying aspects of my work is when I need to quote some text that is provided in graphic form. Using it is as easy as taking a screengrab and then pasting. It takes text in a graphic or non-selectable PDF and turns it into actual text using Optical Character Recognition (OCR). TextSniper is a new Mac app I wish I’d had years ago.
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