Capturing what's on your CMF Phone 2 Pro's screen is a breeze with Nothing OS 3.0. Whether you're saving a cool widget setup from the Glyph Interface or sharing a bug you found, you've got several quick ways to do it.
Press the Power and Volume Down Buttons
The classic Android method works perfectly here. Just press the Power button and the Volume Down button at the same time for a brief moment. You'll see a quick flash and hear a shutter sound, and a small preview will pop up in the corner. You can tap that preview to edit or share right away.
Use the Quick Settings Tile
Swipe down from the top of your screen twice to pull down the full Quick Settings panel. Look for a tile labeled Screenshot. If you don't see it, tap the pencil icon to edit your tiles and add it from the list. Once it's there, a single tap will capture your screen instantly, which is great if the button combo feels awkward.
Ask Google Assistant
When your hands are full or you just want to be hands-free, you can use your voice. Simply say, "Hey Google, take a screenshot." Your phone will capture the current screen and save it automatically. You can also type the command after opening the Google Assistant app manually.
Take a Scrolling Screenshot
This is super useful for capturing long web pages or conversations. First, take a regular screenshot using any method. In the preview that appears at the bottom, tap the button that says Capture more. The phone will automatically scroll and extend the screenshot. You can keep tapping it to capture as much length as you need, all saved in one tall image file.
I find this feature works really well with Nothing's clean interface, making it easy to document entire threads or articles without any fuss.
Edit and Annotate Immediately
Right after you take a screenshot, tap the floating preview thumbnail. This opens Nothing's built-in editor. From here, you can crop the image, draw on it with different colors, add text, or use a highlighter. When you're done, tap the share icon to send it directly through any app like WhatsApp or Gmail.
If you ignore the preview, the screenshot saves without any edits. You can always come back to it later in your gallery.
Find Your Saved Screenshots
All your screenshots are neatly organized. Open the Google Photos app that comes pre-installed and navigate to the Library tab. You'll see a Screenshots folder there with all your captures. Alternatively, you can use a file manager app to browse to Internal storage > Pictures > Screenshots.
The lightweight Nothing OS keeps things simple, so you won't have to dig through cluttered menus to find what you need.













