- Do one of the following if you have:
- Click Save .
- Locate and double-click the folder where you want to save the page.
- In the File name box, type the file name of the page, and then click Save.
Opened the page from the current Web site
- Click Save .
Opened the page from a location outside the current Web site
- On the File menu, click Save As.
- Locate and double-click the folder where you want to save the page.
- In the File name box, type the file name of the page, and then click Save.
Save a Web page to a different Web site
- On the File menu, click Save As.
- Locate and click the Web site where you want to save the page.
- In the File name box, type the name of the page.
- Click Save .
Save a Web page to a file system
- On the File menu, click Save As.
- Locate and click the location in the file system where you want to save the page.
- In the File name box, type the name of the page.
- Click Save.
Save a Web page automatically before previewing it in the browser
- On the File menu, point to Preview in Browser, and then click Edit Browser List.
- Click the Automatically save page before previewing check box.
Notes
- If you have added graphics, ActiveX controls, sound files, or other objects to the page, you will be prompted to save them to the same location as the page.
- To ensure that all site visitors can follow URLs regardless of their computer language or operating system, you should use plain ASCII characters in the URLs for your Web pages. On intranets, using non-ASCII characters in a file name will work as long as the server and all clients share the same system code page.