You can send it, and depending on how the HTML file was coded, it might even work as expected.
If you have used external resources on the page (images, CSS files, JavaScript inclusions, etc.) and they are included using a relative URL (i.e. js/ourFancyScript.js) then they won't be available to the recipient. You would have to send these files as well, and they would have to be located on the recipients hard-drive relative to each other they same way they were on yours.
With images and CSS, however, you can use an absolute URL (one that starts with http:// or file://) and that will cause the user's browser to go out and fetch that resource.
With JavaScript, the code is sandboxed, and certain functions aren't allowed across the web like that--so the ability to use an absolute URL will depend heavily on how the end user opens the HTML file, which browser they're using, and how the original script acted.
You can save your HTML file from the browser as an Archived HTML file, but the best way to send a HTML file and its folders is to zip it.
just click submit
You cannot. A HTML file is a static file and it cannot get or receive dynamic contents that a Servlet may pass or send.
First, a HTML editor should be used to make your e-mail how you want, then save it as an HTML file. Next, use an internet browser to open the HTML file you created, and then select all the text you created. Finally, paste your message into an e-mail and send it.
Images cannot be stored in the actual HTML file itself. HTML is always stored in a text file. Text files cannot store images. What will be in it is a reference to the image which enables the page to show the image, by looking to its location. When you open the HTML file in a browser, it will show the image.
http://www.irs.gov/file/article/0,,id=111348,00.html
http://www.irs.gov/file/article/0,,id=100777,00.html
http://www.irs.gov/file/article/0,,id=111163,00.html
<i> is for italics the HTML tag itself <html> is to let the browser know how to read the code and you save the file as .html or .htm. It simply reference the code that the web page is written in.
Where is the HTML file on you blog?
A web page need not have an HTML suffix. It can have HTM or SHTML instead. Or a server can be directed to send any file as HTML using either the server's configuration files or a .htaccess file in the same directory as the web page.
http://www.irs.gov/file/content/0,,id=105693,00.html