The extension on the other hand saved them all perfectly as a 1:1 copy, and more importantly in just one file. The web page's favicon on the tab bar, the Wikipedia logo at the top left, the language icon on the left, and the user icon near the top right, are all missing in the one saved by the browser's tool. Can you see the differences?Īllow me to highlight them. Now compare it with the one saved by the Save Page WE extension. ![]() I disabled the internet and opened the page from my hard drive. I saved this Wikipedia page using Firefox's built-in "save page" option. This single file has all the content that was on the webpage.īefore we get into the options of the extension, let me show you an example. ![]() Using an extension like Single File (Chrome, Firefox) or Save Page WE can help you save webpages as HTML files without the folders. The number of files in the folder varies from website to website, and page to page. Normally, when you click the "Save Page As" option, the browser downloads the content on the page and saves it as a HTML file and a folder that contains the media, icons, CSS code and other web elements that were present on the page.
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