I haven't figured out a way to do a full-page printout of gmail in Firefox -- I believe because the window that's scrolling in gmail isn't actually the web page itself, it's just a random page element. When you try to "capture entire page" (which there is a screen-capture option in Firefox for if you hit ctrl-shift-S), gmail will always just show the currently visible bit of message.
Gmail does, however, have a mechanism to print out a full threaded conversation. In the upper right of a conversation is a printer icon. If you mouse-over this it says, "Print all". [image: image.png] Clicking it will give a print preview with all the messages in the thread opened up and in order. You can save this as a PDF to keep a record of the entire conversation. It will be paginated, though. It's not a pixel-perfect rendition of the gmail window, but it should contain all the information that was in the original messages. I am not sure if this is adequate for your needs, but it is a convenient and built-into-gmail option. On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 6:13 PM charles meyer <reachmepl...@gmail.com> wrote: > My esteemed listmates, > > This is a very serious. > > Normally, in Firefox when I want to take a screenshot of all that I see as > I scroll down the page I press Ctrl + Shift + K and then type in > :screenshot --fullpage and it captures WYSIWYG in a PNG on to my hard > drive. > > I try that with back and forth emails in Gmail but that doesn't work. > > If I want to capture all the emails exchanged with a person in a gmail > account normally I press Reply or Forward I can capture all the back and > forty. > > That doesn't work with this gmail exchange. > > I'vde taken to snapping photos wiht my cell phone of each screen as I > screen down to capture the WYSIWYG. > > In Chrome and The Edge I can use that Screen Devouring icon which resembles > a Pac Man as it bites along the screen from left to right and captures all > the scrolling down as WYSIWYG but I must use FF in this case. > > Is there any Screen Devouring extension for FF? > > Thank you for your understanding, nonjudgmental help. > > Charles. > > Charlotte County Public Library >