I don't understand the concepts here - I put that code into my custom form
and left it there...if it's not supposed to go there, where does it go and
how do you run it across a particular folder to have that folders contents
reflect the use of the new form?
I'm pulling my hair out, I'm a frickin computer science major and this stuff
is unbelievably confusing...
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:
Delete the MsgBox "Done" statement.
The code that you cited changes the MessageClass property on existing items so that they will use your custom form. You should run that form only once. You should ****not**** use that code in your own custom form.
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm
and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx
"Frustrated to the MAX!" wrote in message ...
got it to work by inserting code into the form - how do i get rid of the
"done" box that now pops up prior to every contact openning? If I eliminate
the code in that form, will the contacts keep using the new form, or does the
code need to run every time prior to openning a contact?
code was found he http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=290659
"Frustrated to the MAX!" wrote:
thanks sue - okay, when I modify a custom form for my contacts, it appears to
me that the change is not reflected in all the contacts that use that form
... Am I doing something wrong?
And if every contact isn't automatically updated with the same named form it
uses (quite unbelievable to me if true), then how do you automatically update
all existing contacts using the modified custom form? Please, oh please
don't tell me the only solution is to run scripts and modify the registry :-)