Thanks.
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message
...
There are several ways to do this, roughly in order from easy to hard:
1) Create an email message with blank spaces where you want the user to
type, then save it as an .oft file. Invoke it with the
Application.CreateItemFromTemplate method from the Outlook object model.
2) Create a Word template with the desired layout and fields and include a
macro to display the "Office envelope" controls where the user can enter
recipients and subject.
3) Provide your own interface where the user can enter the necessary data,
then create an email message, either with one of the above types of
templates or by building raw HTML, and then display it to the user for
further modifcation.
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming:
Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators
http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54
"Neil" wrote in message
et...
I'm looking for something that the user can create and apply formatting
to,
but place fields or placeholders in the e-mail template or whatever, where
my code can use it to create an e-mail and fill in the data in the fields.
This would be similar to a Word doc that has "fields" or "bookmarks" in it
that can be replaced with data. (You might ask, why not just use Word,
then?
The answer is, I could, but I'd prefer to use Outlook, as users are used
to
sending e-mails from Outlook.)
This is something that might be set up by an administrator and then used
by
various users. The e-mail does not need to be sent, just opened for the
user
to send.
Version is Office 2003, with a possible upgrade to 2007.
Thanks,
Neil
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message
...
[removing microsoft.public.outlook group]
In that case, you're not talking about published Outlook custom forms at
all. There are several possible approaches, but they depend on how much
code
you want to write, your comfort level with writing HTML code, the Outlook
version, whether this is something for your personal use or for wider
distribution, and your tolerance for security prompts. Could you fill in
some more details for us?
For the security prompt issue, see See
http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?ID=52 for your options with regard
to the "object model guard" security in Outlook 2000 SP2 and later
versions.
"Neil" wrote in message
. net...
Thanks to both of you. I would be doing this from outside Outlook
(through
Automation), and I would need to place text within the body of the
e-mail,
e.g.:
Dear [ ]
Thank you for your [ ].
Regards,
[ ]
And so on.
"Steven M (remove wax and invalid to reply)"
wrote in message ...
Je Thu, 12 Jul 2007 19:42:26 GMT, "Neil" skribis:
Does Outlook have an e-mail "form" or "template" where the body of an
e-mail
can be created, and just certain fields can be filled in, as particular
to
the recipient?
What I am needing to do is create such a form (if possible), open
Outlook
through Automation, and then populate certain fields with the data, and
then
send the e-mail (or leave open for the user).
I'm no expert, but I have been able to do this for my personal (not
company) installation of Outlook. One example: for spam complaints.
I click one button and a new email pops up, with a couple of addresses
already filled in and the words "Spam report:" in the subject line. I
do it without templates, just an Outlook macro.
It's a lot more difficult since Outlook doesn't have a macro recorder
(version 2000, anyway) like Word and Excel do, but I was able to find
some code online and modify it.