You can save it to anywhere you want, like your hard disk or a USB key. You specify where you want to save it. If you don't specify, normally it will go to the My Documents folder.
You can determine where a document is going to be saved by choosing the save as function. This will allow you to pick where the document goes and then you can choose save when updates are made to the document.
save button
It takes up space each time you save a document or anything.
When saving document for the first time functions save and save as behave alike. If the document has been saved then: Save - you save the document as it is. Cannot change its location, name or format/extension. Save as - this function allows you to change all above metioned parameters of the file.
When you want to make changes to a document, you need to be able to keep those changes around. This is known as saving. When you save a document, it writes the contents of that document to the hard drive for use later on.
A document cannot really be saved permanently. If someone decides to delete it, it can be deleted. To prevent this you should backup all your files, documents, photos, and music to an external source; preferably an online backup system.
When you save a Word document, the action is referred to as "saving" the document. This process can involve either saving it for the first time, which prompts you to choose a file name and location, or updating an existing document, which simply overwrites the previous version. The saved document is then stored in a specific file format, typically ".docx" for modern versions of Microsoft Word.
When you do a save, the changes are applied to the document you originally opened. When you do a 'save as', you have to choose a name and a location where a copy of the document will be saved; this copy will have changes you are currently making to the document. You can then exit the document without saving, and your original document is unchanged. The copy that you 'save as' is still intact, with changes. You can also do a 'save as' without making any changes, just to have another copy of the document existing with a new name and/or location.
It allows you to save as a different file name, effectively creating an entirely new file instead of saving over the old one. The old one is kept.
no, but windows does perform autosave at times.
When given the option to save the document you can change the document title by overwriting the default name given it. Or you can change the document title after saving by right clicking on the document icon and selecting the "Rename" option.
See if you have access rights to save documents to the PC. There is no specific restriction with respect to HTML documents and saving them using notepad.