Enlarge attachment "window" in incoming email?
"Jim Pickering" wrote:
If you try forwarding the message (using Plain Text), do
all the attachments
appear just below the Subject line?
Yes.
You do know that you can click on the
menu, File/Save Attachments and it will save all attached
files.
Was not aware of that, and it may be useful at times. I
guess it is another way of seeing the full list of
attachments when the attachments sub-window is not tall
enough to list them all.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.
"CWLee" wrote in message
...
"Bruce Hagen" wrote:
Is this *window* the field to the right where it says
Attach: when viewing a
message in its own window? That cannot be changed.
No, I believe we are talking about something else. When
I
view a message in its own window, and if that message
has
one or more attachments, there is a new "sub-window"
just
below the Subject line that appears. It varies in size;
if
only one attachment it is 1-line high, but if there are
2 or
more attachments it is sometimes several lines high
showing
all attachments and other times it is just 1 line high
but
with scroll buttons (up and down) to the right.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~
"CWLee" wrote in message
...
From time to time I receive email having one or more
attachments. Usually the "window" on the incoming
message
form is large enough to list all of these
attachments.
However, sometimes that "window" is only 1 line high,
with
arrow buttons at the right to scroll up and down. In
those
cases, if there are several attachments, one cannot
scroll
slow enough to see the names of all of the
attachments.
Thus, I can't tell if I've opened all the
attachments.
Is there a way to enlarge this "window" so that all
attachments are shown?
I'm using W-2000/pro, and OE6.
Thanks.
--
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CWLee
Former slayer of dragons; practice now limited to
sacred
cows. Believing we should hire for quality, not
quotas,
and
promote for performance, not preferences.
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