So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
So that it can be used as a web page.
When you go to save your file, type in your desired file name, then type ".html" on the end. This tells Notepad that you want to save your document as an HTML file.
If you choose to save as a html file than it will else it will save as the file type you told it to.
go to file menu--> select option "save as" --> then choose the file type "html document" name the file. and you are done
open HTML file, delete "code", save file
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.
You could press ctrl/⌘ + S to save the file. You will need to add .html at the end if it isn't there already.
Nothing. The HTML extension is just a convenient way of identifying an HTML file on your computer. The actual content of the file is plain text--the same kind of text you might save in Notepad or Vi.
When you save an HTML file, the contents of that file are written on the hard drive. This has the effect of changing the contents of the file. When you read and HTML file, the file remains unchanged on the disk.
Go to Notepad, enter HTML, and save the file with an extension of either .htm or .html.
You save it as a text file with either a .htm or a .html extension.
If you have a .txt file that you want to be a html file, do this: open the .txt file and then save as and (change the name to what you want to call the file).html. Make sure that you 'save as' for all files or you will be saved as: somename.html.txt which will result it still be a text document. Make sure that you have the document in HTML format.
A .jpeg file is not in an HTML file. It is a separate file that is called from the HTML file to display on the browser. You can get the URL of the jpeg file from the HTML file and if the graphic is still there, the file can be obtained from its location. If you are on the actual web page that displays the image, you can usually right click on the image and select 'Save As' and save the file. Some web sites have their images protected to prevent you from saving their photos onto your harddrive.