Saving Web Content
Eventually you'll be seized with the desire to save a memento or two of your travels on the web, perhaps for safekeeping, or perhaps to use in another application.
In general, if there's something in an OmniWeb window that you'd like to have elsewhere, you can simply select it and drag it. Images can be saved in the appropriate formats by dragging them to Finder windows or the desktop (if an image is also a clickable link, you'll need to hold the Shift key while dragging -- otherwise a link will be saved instead). Dragging text to the Finder will save it as a text clipping. You can also drag images and text into other applications that can handle them. And of course, you can use the standard commands in the menu to get data from one application to another easily.
There are plenty of other ways to save web pages, images, and other page resources:
To save a web page (or an individual file in its original format), choose from the menu. From there, you can choose to save as or as a . Saving the source means just getting the file itself, whether it's an HTML source file, an image, or some other kind of file. Saving a web archive means getting the page and all of the images, styles, and other embedded content, and stuffing them all into one package. Then you can open the archive at any time to see the page as it was when you saved it.
To save a web page in PDF format, hold down Option and choose from the menu. This saves the current web page as a single-page PDF document. You can also use the Save As PDF functionality in the Print panel to save a paginated PDF file (if there are multiple pages).
If you're looking at a page full of links to images (say, a photo album with thumbnails that link to larger images) and you'd like to save them all to disk, choose from the menu.
To save all the other HTML documents linked from the web page you're currently viewing, choose from the menu.
Also, elements in web pages can be saved to disk by control-clicking on them and choosing one of the Save items from the contextual menu.
Additionally, OmniWeb provides a Page Info panel. This is a hierarchical list of resources that make up the page sorted by type. This serves as another method of saving resources from web pages.