While not universal, most applications will allow you to save a file or document for the first time by going to File > Save As. Subsequent changes to the file can be made by going to File > Save. Also after making changes to a document, when you try to exit the program without saving, it will ask to confirm and allow you to save the document.
"Save" saves the document with the same name/type as you opened or created it. "Save As" allows you to save the document with a new name or format/type.
To save a previously saved document to the same location with the same name.
Open it with word 2007 and then save it from Save as command
save button
"Save" saves the document with the same name/type as you opened or created it. "Save As" allows you to save the document with a new name or format/type.
Save document screen
The command used to store a document as a file on a disk is typically "Save" or "Save As" in most software applications. In programming contexts, the command may vary depending on the language and environment, but functions like write() in Python or fopen() in C are commonly used to save data to a file.
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.
First you need to give it a filename, if you start writing and want to take a break, when you only click Save.
To save a document on Pages, click on the "File" menu at the top-left corner of the screen and then select "Save" or "Save As." You can also use the shortcut "Command + S" to save the document quickly. Choose the location on your device where you want to save the file, give it a name, and then click "Save." Your document will now be saved and you can access it later from that location.
yes
You would choose the 'save as' option