This method, however brings in a lot of trash and junk you probably don't want or need. I have done this several times as an experiment and it works as long as the file is well-formed. InDesign is very literal in the file naming area. You can use InDesign's XML import feature to import HTML if you first save the HTML file with an. InDesign will fail to import any file that is not well-formed. All tags must be properly closed, balanced and nested. HTML if written to XHTML standards is basically XML. It's not very powerful back then, but since CS3 it has been improved. InDesign has been able to import XML from version CS, at least. Since I can't see a sample of the HTML to give an education answer, I'll give you several possible answers: There are several possible answers to this question.
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