![]() You print by choosing the Print… option from the main menu, which is accessible from the three-horizontal-lines button on the top right:Ĭhoose “ Print …” from this Chrome menu and you’ll have a nice preview of what’d be sent to the printer: Now you could share the screen capture if you want to use the Snipping tool that’s included with Win10, but instead, let’s create that PDF so that we also have the content that’s not current displayed in the window. Pretty typical news, photos, and appearance: To start, here’s the Bing News home page. The trick is to know that when you request a printout, you can actually redirect the print job directly to a PDF file! ![]() That’s surprisingly tricky to do because even the Google Chrome extensions available seem to be focused on making it easier to mail the URL not the page itself.įortunately there’s a trick you can use that creates a new document on your computer in PDF format that contains the actual content of the page in question, and it’s all related to the print feature in Chrome. Since it’s so super easy to email someone a URL (copy from the address bar, paste into an email message) I’ll assume that you’re talking about literally emailing someone the contents of a specific Web page so that they can read the article without having to actually go to the site themselves.
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