Programmatic screenshot capture on macOS. Find window IDs with Swift CGWindowListCopyWindowInfo, control application windows via AppleScript (zoom, scroll, select), and capture with screencapture. Use when automating screenshots, capturing application windows for documentation, or building multi-shot visual workflows.
Programmatic screenshot capture on macOS: find windows, control views, capture images.
# Find Excel window ID
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift Excel
# Capture that window (replace 12345 with actual WID)
screencapture -x -l 12345 output.png
Three-step workflow:
1. Find Window → Swift CGWindowListCopyWindowInfo → get numeric Window ID
2. Control View → AppleScript (osascript) → zoom, scroll, select
3. Capture → screencapture -l <WID> → PNG/JPEG output
Use Swift with CoreGraphics to enumerate windows. This is the only reliable method on macOS.
swift -e '
import CoreGraphics
let keyword = "Excel"
let list = CGWindowListCopyWindowInfo(.optionOnScreenOnly, kCGNullWindowID) as? [[String: Any]] ?? []
for w in list {
let owner = w[kCGWindowOwnerName as String] as? String ?? ""
let name = w[kCGWindowName as String] as? String ?? ""
let wid = w[kCGWindowNumber as String] as? Int ?? 0
if owner.localizedCaseInsensitiveContains(keyword) || name.localizedCaseInsensitiveContains(keyword) {
print("WID=\(wid) | App=\(owner) | Title=\(name)")
}
}
'
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift Excel
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift Chrome
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift # List all windows
Output format: WID=12345 | App=Microsoft Excel | Title=workbook.xlsx
Parse the WID number for use with screencapture -l.
Verified commands for controlling application windows before capture.
# Activate (bring to front)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to activate'
# Set zoom level (percentage)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set zoom of active window to 120
end tell'
# Scroll to specific row
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll row of active window to 45
end tell'
# Scroll to specific column
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll column of active window to 3
end tell'
# Select a cell range
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
select range "A1" of active sheet
end tell'
# Select a specific sheet
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
activate object sheet "DCF" of active workbook
end tell'
# Open a file
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
open POSIX file "/path/to/file.xlsx"
end tell'
# Activate any app
osascript -e 'tell application "Google Chrome" to activate'
# Bring specific window to front (by index)
osascript -e 'tell application "System Events"
tell process "Google Chrome"
perform action "AXRaise" of window 1
end tell
end tell'
Always add sleep 1 after AppleScript commands before capturing, to allow UI rendering to complete.
IMPORTANT: osascript hangs indefinitely if the target application is not running or not responding. Always wrap with timeout:
timeout 5 osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to activate'
# Capture specific window by ID
screencapture -l <WID> output.png
# Silent capture (no camera shutter sound)
screencapture -x -l <WID> output.png
# Capture as JPEG
screencapture -l <WID> -t jpg output.jpg
# Capture with delay (seconds)
screencapture -l <WID> -T 2 output.png
# Capture a screen region (interactive)
screencapture -R x,y,width,height output.png
On Retina Macs, screencapture outputs 2x resolution by default (e.g., a 2032x1238 window produces a 4064x2476 PNG). This is normal. To get 1x resolution, resize after capture:
sips --resampleWidth 2032 output.png --out output_1x.png
# Check file was created and has content
ls -la output.png
file output.png # Should show "PNG image data, ..."
Complete example: capture multiple sections of an Excel workbook.
# 1. Open file and activate Excel
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
open POSIX file "/path/to/model.xlsx"
activate
end tell'
sleep 2
# 2. Set up view
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set zoom of active window to 130
activate object sheet "Summary" of active workbook
end tell'
sleep 1
# 3. Get window ID
# IMPORTANT: Always re-fetch before capturing. CGWindowID is invalidated
# when an app restarts or a window is closed and reopened.
WID=$(swift -e '
import CoreGraphics
let list = CGWindowListCopyWindowInfo(.optionOnScreenOnly, kCGNullWindowID) as? [[String: Any]] ?? []
for w in list {
let owner = w[kCGWindowOwnerName as String] as? String ?? ""
let wid = w[kCGWindowNumber as String] as? Int ?? 0
if owner == "Microsoft Excel" { print(wid); break }
}
')
echo "Window ID: $WID"
# 4. Capture Section A (top of sheet)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll row of active window to 1
end tell'
sleep 1
screencapture -x -l $WID section_a.png
# 5. Capture Section B (further down)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll row of active window to 45
end tell'
sleep 1
screencapture -x -l $WID section_b.png
# 6. Switch sheet and capture
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
activate object sheet "DCF" of active workbook
set scroll row of active window to 1
end tell'
sleep 1
screencapture -x -l $WID dcf_overview.png
These methods were tested and confirmed to fail on macOS:
| Method | Error | Why It Fails |
|---|---|---|
System Events → id of window | Error -1728 | System Events cannot access window IDs in the format screencapture needs |
Python import Quartz (PyObjC) | ModuleNotFoundError | PyObjC not installed in system Python; don't attempt to install it — use Swift instead |
osascript window id | Wrong format | Returns AppleScript window index, not CGWindowID needed by screencapture -l |
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift reads on-screen windows via CoreGraphics, so it needs Screen Recording permission on macOS.
Use this order:
If the command fails with ERROR: Failed to enumerate windows, do this:
open "x-apple.systempreferences:com.apple.preference.security?Privacy_ScreenCapture"
Or print the same checklist directly from the script:
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift --permission-hint screen
swift scripts/get_window_id.swift --permission-hint microphone
Then:
swift / terminal helpers)..app during permission verification.+ and add the .app manually from /Applications.swift, Terminal, iTerm, etc.), not the business app.For mic-access-related prompts, use the same pattern with the microphone pane:
open "x-apple.systempreferences:com.apple.preference.security?Privacy_Microphone"
The same rule still applies: the system can only show permissions for a concrete .app bundle. If the request is made by a helper binary, the settings list can be misleading or empty for your product app.
1) Error: permission denied
2) Open target pane
3) Verify identity shown by OS = identity you granted
4) If not matched, use the script-reported candidate identities and grant the launcher process
5) Reopen/restart and verify
For production apps, avoid requesting permissions via swift/python entry points; always route permission checks in the packaged app process so users only see one target.
If you maintain another macOS permission-related flow, reuse this standardized triage template:
| Application | Window ID | AppleScript Control | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microsoft Excel | Swift | Full (zoom, scroll, select, activate sheet) | Best supported |
| Google Chrome | Swift | Basic (activate, window management) | No scroll/zoom via AppleScript |
| Any macOS app | Swift | Basic (activate via tell application) | screencapture works universally |
AppleScript control depth varies by application. Excel has the richest AppleScript dictionary. For apps with limited AppleScript, use keyboard simulation via System Events as a fallback.