Generate screenshots from websites almost instantly at any preferred size using ruby and the url2png.com API
A Ruby wrapper around webkit2png.py to easily and programmatically capture screenshots of websites, then crop and resize them. Mac OS X only.
Snapcrawl is a command line utility for crawling a website and saving screenshots.
Kontrast is a testing tool that lets you build a frontend test suite to run against your test and production websites. It uses Selenium to take screenshots and ImageMagick to compare them. Kontrast then produces a detailed gallery of its test results.
Website screenshot API gem for https://prtscr.ru
Creates a new webkit window using the QT framework of a specified url and saves a screenshot when the page has finished loading.
Take screenshots with capybara/watir/whatever, and upload them automatically to an AWS S3 bucket as a static website. Requires static site configuration in S3.
Ruby Webshot gem will make nice webshots for you. I needed the webshot/screenshot functionality for one of my website and after trying few ruby gems currently available I found that they are not updated lately and that they are using depricated version of `PhantomJS`: 'webshot' [ https://github.com/vitalie/webshot ] 'screenshot' [ https://github.com/amire80/screenshot ]. Also, I had an issue with produced image CSS formating when I used webshot gem. So, I decided to start building a gem for myself and to share for anyone who need something like this. The Ruby Webshot Gem use latest `Webdrivers`.
ruboty plugin for take a screenshot of website.
Takes a list of URLs, and generates a blog-friendly code that presents each of the websites
Bulk screenshot a list of websites
Website screenshot for Ruby uses Selenium with Chrome Driver
Ruby Library for the screenshotlayer API, a web service that captures highly customizable snapshots of any website, https://screenshotlayer.com/
The official ruby client of ApiFlash, website screenshot API.
loader_detector was developed to efficiently detect changes on websites. It does this by using fast screenshots and counting the pixel differences between these screenshots. It can be used in automated test scenarios to determine whether, for example, a loader is still running on the tested website or whether the loading process has been completed.
Take screenshots of websites.