![]() It is a very basic task that should not require multiple steps of opening another application to create a desktop shortcut is the point I think of the OP. ![]() Save the page as index.html on your computer. Right click on the page and click on Save As. The source of the web page is displayed in the browser. I'm using Edge on my Android phone and I can send a shortcutįor a webpage to the Android Launcher - but I can't do the same with Edge on my Windows 10 computer? Open your browser, go to the Facebook website, Right click on the webpage and click on view page source. ![]() Point is it's annoying because Microsoft wants Edge to be the default browser but then the Microsoft employee on here responds with the suggestion to send it to IE to create a Desktop shortcut. Then there is no nice quick link from my desktop, I have to open Edge and select the Favorite. Used this many times with IE desktop links when Black Friday shopping. Instead of saving the empty HTML page as such, save it as something like this: 'subscriberform.php'. By doing this, the server will know to host the PHP you write. I can't do this in Edge unless I create a Favorite for it IN Edge. When youre creating a webpage, instead of using the '.html' extension, type '.php' instead. ![]() If I'm shopping away in IE and create a shortcut to that webpage on the desktop from IE, if I haven't cleared my cache, it remembers the stuff in my cart for the IE shortcut (for as long as the cookie is good, not just a shopping cart but other similar pages).
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