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Home/ Questions/Q 1023769
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T11:40:39+00:00 2026-05-16T11:40:39+00:00

Is there a Windows application that I could use to simply paste the HTML

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Is there a Windows application that I could use to simply paste the HTML source of a page, and have it parsed so that I can see where each section starts and ends?

When lines are wrongly indented, it’s a pain to figure out the logic of a page.

I’d rather a stand-alone utility rather than an add-on to a browser.

Thank you.


Edit: If possible, I’d like a light utility (ie. not a full-fledged IDE like Eclipse or VS) that displays blocks as a tree, so I can fold/unfold blocks and concentrate on those I’m interested in.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T11:40:39+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:40 am

    The built-in DOM inspectors in most modern browsers would be a good start. I know you said stand-alone rather than a browser add-on, but the advantage with these is that they will highlight the element on the page which is extremely handy. They’re also good for playing with CSS and quick Javascript experiments.

    For IE8, go to Tools > Developer Tools (or F12). There are a couple of extentions available for IE6 & IE7: IE Developer Toolbar and Web Development Helper

    For Opera and Chrome, simply right click anywhere > Inspect Element. Safari also has this it just has to be enabled.

    For Firefox you need to download Firebug

    Of all of these I prefer Firebug. In my experience it tends to be most stable and easiest to make HTML and CSS changes to the page for experimenting, although the WebKit inspector is also very good.

    Always remember that these tools show you the parsed DOM tree, which may be different from the original HTML.

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