Save a Web Page

Because you might need to keep information on a Web page, you can save the page. Saving a Web site page allows you to view it offline, work with its information, and print it, for example.

When you save a Web page, you’re saving the page as it currently exists on your screen. To see any subsequent changes, you must revisit the actual site.

Save your currently viewed Web page by following these steps:

1

Choose Save As from Internet Explorer’s Page menu.

When the Save Webpage box appears, Internet Explorer enters the Web page’s name in the File Name box and fills out the Encoding box automatically.

2

Use the Browse Folders drop-down list to choose where you want to save the file.

Internet Explorer normally saves the Web page in your Downloads folder, accessible with a click on your username that sits atop the Start menu’s right corner. To save the Web page in a different folder, perhaps Documents, click the Browse Folders drop-down list.

3

Choose how you want to save the page in the Save as Type box.

Internet Explorer offers the following four different ways to save the Web page: Webpage, Complete (*.htm;*.html); Web Archive, Single File (*.mht); Web Page, HTML Only (*.htm;*.html); and Text File (*.txt).

4

Click the Save button when you’re done.

The Web page is safely stored on your computer so you can view it when you’re not online. Note that when accessing a Web site that you’ve saved on your computer, you can only review the site’s content. The Web site’s hyperlinks and other interactive features won’t work unless you get online.

To revisit your saved Web page, open your Downloads folder and click the saved file. Internet Explorer leaps back to life and displays the page.

Comments (5)

  1. Posted by MARGARET
    everytime, iearn very inportant information from dummies. i have so many of dummies book. yea,i do read and re-read these books.i, kow this book will be aon my list soon. if you are reading this-you know i can not spell.
  2. Posted by Peter Vilanova
    Step by step procedure is ok. But my problem is which of the "four different ways to save the Web page" I have to select. Please, advise!
  3. Posted by Linda A.
    In Step 1, it should be noted that, in older versions of Explorer, such as IE 6, which is what I use, the "Page" menu is called "File," and the page-saving options are there.
  4. Posted by Ken Harris
    As for the last line of step 4, one does not need to go to the folder where the page was saved, to open re-visit it. Just go to the My Recent Documents - Win XP, or to the Recent Documents - Vista, and click on the link.
  5. Posted by phentermine and zoloft us approved pharmacies
    ZZ7suV It is the coolest site, keep so!

Leave a Reply


Post Comment

Connect with For Dummies

Sign Up for RSS Feeds

Computers & Software

Inside Dummies.com