The File name is the name you want to give the file. The Save As Type allows you specify different formats that you can save the file in. You may be saving the file so that it can be opened with other applications. You may be saving it, but not with the particular extension that is standard for it, but with your on. For a web page saved in a text editor you would use .htm or .html for the extension, and use the *.* for the Save As Type to ensure it doesn't add a .txt extension onto the end of the filename.
File Name is the name by which you want to save the document. It defined by what name you can search the file later on.
select the file menu and choose save as
select the file menu and choose save as
a file
Use Save As in the File menu. Then pick one of the text file options in the Save As Type option.
Go to the File menu, then click Save as... , a dialog box will show up where you can change where it's saved, the file format, and the name. Click save when you're done.
Go to the File menu and pick Save As. In the Save As Type part of the dialog box that opens, from its drop down menu pick one of the Text options, which will have a txt extension. Then give the file a name and click Save.
In the top corner there will be a File button. Click it and at the bottom it should say save. Click save and you'll have to find a name for your file. Then click save, it should be at the bottom of the page.
Save as appear in the menu of all Microsoft application.
When you save the file, in the save as file dialog, click the drop down menu "Save As type". You can select "Webpage", "Single File Website", or "Webpage Filtered". Then save the file and you can open it as a webpage.
Save the file using the 'save as' function - and select the file type from the drop-down menu.
To change an Adobe file to another file type you need to click on the save as button. From there, use the pull down menu to save the file in another format.
With a file open, go into the File menu and pick Save As and you can choose a different file type to save your document as.