RedHawke beat me to the punch, but I'll leave this up there just in the off chance that my insane degree of verbosity winds up helpful somewhere in that whole big mess below. :lol:
Screenshot...I find it hard to admit this given my overall state of geekiness, but I actually don't know how to take one in XP... :( Instructions, please?
1. Open up some sort of graphics editing software (Photoshop, paintshop pro, or even plain old paint will work ok if that's what you've got available) and then minimize it just to get it out of the way for now.
2. Open up KotOR Tool and get the character editor up and positioned on screen so you're looking at it while seeing the problem it's having.
3. Press the PrtScr (Print Screen) key, which is typically somewhere in the upper right area of the keyboard, most often a little above the insert, home, page up keys. It's the same key you'll often find used to take in-game screen shots.
4. Restore/Maximize your graphics software and select from the top menu there, "File > New".
a. If you're using Photoshop, a box of options will pop up for image dimensions and so forth. It SHOULD sense the fact that you've got something stored in the clipboard, which will be apparent because the height and width will be the same as your desktop resolution, and the preset (if any) will read 'clipboard'. You should be able to just hit OK and proceed.
5. When you've got your new blank image, hit CTRL-V to paste the clipboard into the new image. It should show up and look like a smaller picture of your desktop when you took the image.
a. If you're using Photoshop, click on the "Layer" top-menu item and near the bottom select "Flatten Image".
6. If you know how or can figure out how to crop the image, you can (and should) crop out anything other than the section that shows the tool and what it's doing. This makes a smaller file, and the rest of your desktop isn't going to likely help figure this out anyway. ;)
7. Select "File > Save As" from the top menu, and select a folder you can find easily later (like your documents folder or desktop for instance) and give it some sort of file name. Choose to save as JPG (JPEG type) and select about mid-level quality (if prompted -usually with a slider bar) to keep the file size down.
8. Host the image on the web somewhere, and post the link here. I reccomend ImageShack (
http://imageshack.us/) as a convienient place to host an image.
Lastly, I hope the above didn't come across like I was trying to talk down to you or anything. I'm just trying to be as clear and complete as I possibly can to reduce the number of potential follow up questions you may need to ask. Never know just which aspects of any of this sort of thing someone does or doesn't already know. ;)
That said though, if I failed to make something clear above, don't hesitate to ask again and I'll try to do a better job. :)
Cheers,
-Kitty