I want to add a button to my website, which you click, and it then downloads a .eml file .
How would I do this?
Assuming you already have a .eml file present in your site's files, what you would do is add an href link around the button tags. So, something like this:
<a href="file.eml" download>
<button>Download My EML File</button>
</a>
Just point the href to the eml file in question. This method worked for me with word documents so it should theoretically work here unless eml files work in a fundamentally different way to all other kinds of files.
Related
I want users to be able to download an image from my website by clicking a download button
<a href="../assets/assets/styleguide/Consult.jpg" download>
<button class="btn draw-border">Download</button>
</a>
The filepath is correct, and the download is triggered as I get the usual download popup. Instead of giving the option to download as a .jpg, it asks if I want to download 'Consult.jpg' which is in the .html file type, despite having the .jpg extension.
Anyone know why this is happening, or better yet, how to fix it?
Thanks,
Will
Try again by putting the link inside the button tag and give the download attribute the desired name
As I have searched, making a download link is like
<a href="image_url.png" download>download</a>
But the image must be in project directory. How to download from another server?
For example if I want to download django logo the code is supposed to be:
<a href="https://www.djangoproject.com/s/img/logo-django.42234b631760.svg" download>download</a>
but that's not working (it opens and shows the image in the current tab instead of downloading), but any file in my own server is being downloaded easily. What is the best way to do that? tnx
You simply need to put name of the file (how it should be saved) in download. Like this:
download
Edit:
Actually I was wrong. You can find the answer here. If you want to download SVG in regular way, like any other file, you need to use JavaScript, not just plain HTML tags. Or you can download it as PNG, but as I assume: that's not the point.
Sorry for mistake.
you put link in href on anchor tag:
download
I am trying to download one csv file in my html file with anchor tag. Its getting downloaded only as .txt file. Tried few things like download attribute but nothing working.
Please help
<a href="https://xxxxxxxxxxxxx/20140815-111929455-000001-00030-1658.csv?__gda__=1440109223_83f5e968923d7f99b30844358fe4ce4c" download="temp.csv" type="text/csv" target="_blank"/>
What about removing the file name from the download attribute and adding it to your href attribute? Doing it that way should eliminate the need for a target and type as well.
<a href="/path/temp.csv" download>link</a>
I haven't tried this with a csv file before, but it's worked for me with images after checking out a w3schools example.
I'm using HTML web and i want, that users could download a file like .vbs (skype bot) and then i use code like this:
<a href='skypebot.vbs' target='_blank'>download</a>
I get just only that file text. How can i make it download link not uploading it to other site like zippyshare?
How can i make it download link not uploading it to other site like
zippyshare?
You can use a data link. Put the contents of your file (encoded with encodeURI() ) in the link itself:
<a href='data:application/octet-stream,encodeURI(hereContentsGoes)' target='_blank'>download</a>
The file is probably being recognized as a vbs type by your browser, and trying to display it.
Easiest solution is to zip or tar the file and have that be the downloadable file.
<a href='skypebot.zip' target='_blank'>download</a>
I have some PDF's sitting in a folder on my computer, is there a way to write a link to open them on to a webpage?
The main idea is when the site goes live the link will be used to download the pdfs from the folder, but obviously at a later stage the folder will be a temp folder on my website.
So at the moment i just want to open the pdfs from a link, and the final goal will be to have the links download them.
Can any one help me?
This is the file path to get to the pdf i want to link to.
C:\Users\Shaun\Documents\FormValue\CS1.pdf
How would i create the link?
If you want to have a link to a PDF, you just have to put the relative path to the file in the href attribute of an a tag. So let's say you had a folder called pdfs, with the file boom.pdf inside it, and folder called site sitting beside it, with the file site.html in it. Then all you'd have to do is put this link in the html file:
Link to a pdf
In most (all?) browsers now a days, that will open the PDF in a new tab. To download it you would right-click it and do the Save Link As thing. Just need to get the path in href right.
UPDATE
If you want to use the full path to the file, you need to prefix it with file://. Then you just put it in the href the same as with a regular link, ending up with something like:
Link to a pdf
This should work with your set up, but if the pdf and the html files are stored near each other, relative URLs are still a good option. A little bit of Google work should show you how to write those.
For each PDF just do what I talk about here.
<object height="950" data="sample-report.pdf" type="application/pdf" width="860">
<p>It appears you don't have a PDF plugin for this browser.
No biggie... you can <a href="sample-report.pdf">click here to
download the PDF file.</a>
</p>
</object>
It works with most browsers and it degrades nicely.
It sounds like youre asking if you can put a link on a web site to a PDF sitting on your computer. You can't. The files have to be either on another web site or on your site's server.
If you are using ASP.NET, you can have the link point to a handler that accepts a query string identifying the file, either by file name or a hash of the file. Then the handler can look in the folder for a file that matches the pattern, read the file as a byte array, and then write those bytes to HttpResponse.