![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a calendar set up for potential classes as a series.
When using Outlook 2003, I was able to label these red for confirmed classes, and then yellow for cancelled classes, without changing the entire series. When I switched to Outlook 2007, all the ones that were previously red remained so, but now I can't change any new confirmed classes to red without changing the entire series. Is there some way of doing this that I missed? It is so convenient for myself and for the instructors to just look for the red events to see there is indeed, a class. Not having this available is very inconvenient. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Susurration" wrote in message
... I have a calendar set up for potential classes as a series. When using Outlook 2003, I was able to label these red for confirmed classes, and then yellow for cancelled classes, without changing the entire series. When I switched to Outlook 2007, all the ones that were previously red remained so, but now I can't change any new confirmed classes to red without changing the entire series. Is there some way of doing this that I missed? It is so convenient for myself and for the instructors to just look for the red events to see there is indeed, a class. Not having this available is very inconvenient. In Outlook 2003, colors were controlled by labels and labels were assignable to the individual occurrences of recurring appointments. In Outlook 2007, colors are controlled by categories and those are series-wide and cannot be applied to individual occurrences. Categories were series-wide in Outlook 2003 as well. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: "Susurration" wrote in message ... I have a calendar set up for potential classes as a series. When using Outlook 2003, I was able to label these red for confirmed classes, and then yellow for cancelled classes, without changing the entire series. When I switched to Outlook 2007, all the ones that were previously red remained so, but now I can't change any new confirmed classes to red without changing the entire series. Is there some way of doing this that I missed? It is so convenient for myself and for the instructors to just look for the red events to see there is indeed, a class. Not having this available is very inconvenient. In Outlook 2003, colors were controlled by labels and labels were assignable to the individual occurrences of recurring appointments. In Outlook 2007, colors are controlled by categories and those are series-wide and cannot be applied to individual occurrences. Categories were series-wide in Outlook 2003 as well. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] Is there any alternate ways to highlight single occurances in some form? This was a necessary feature in 2003, I may have see if I can switch back to 2003 otherwise. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Susurration" wrote in message
... Is there any alternate ways to highlight single occurances in some form? This was a necessary feature in 2003, I may have see if I can switch back to 2003 otherwise. I don't know of any. Sorry. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Copy them so they break out of the recurrence and change the category of the
single event. Or make individual events, not recurring. (Either make in Excel or make recurring in outlook, export to excel then import to convert to individual events.) -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Susurration" wrote in message ... "Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: "Susurration" wrote in message ... I have a calendar set up for potential classes as a series. When using Outlook 2003, I was able to label these red for confirmed classes, and then yellow for cancelled classes, without changing the entire series. When I switched to Outlook 2007, all the ones that were previously red remained so, but now I can't change any new confirmed classes to red without changing the entire series. Is there some way of doing this that I missed? It is so convenient for myself and for the instructors to just look for the red events to see there is indeed, a class. Not having this available is very inconvenient. In Outlook 2003, colors were controlled by labels and labels were assignable to the individual occurrences of recurring appointments. In Outlook 2007, colors are controlled by categories and those are series-wide and cannot be applied to individual occurrences. Categories were series-wide in Outlook 2003 as well. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] Is there any alternate ways to highlight single occurances in some form? This was a necessary feature in 2003, I may have see if I can switch back to 2003 otherwise. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote:
Copy them so they break out of the recurrence and change the category of the single event. Or make individual events, not recurring. (Either make in Excel or make recurring in outlook, export to excel then import to convert to individual events.) Export here, import back again? SO not an elegant solution! I commented as much on another thread on the same basic topic: "In Outlook 2003, you could set up a recurring calendar item - obviously saves time over setting up individual calendar events - and tag the series with a colored-coded category. THEN, you could open up each instance of a recurrence and change the category color. Sounds rather idiosyncratic but... I relied heavily on this functionality in my small business. I'd set up A-B-C-D series with a color like 'important'. Date A would arrive and I'd know I needed to follow up with Person 1. Once that communication was satisfied, I could change the category color to 'none' which told me that the matter was resolved. Date B would arrive, and I'd repeat the process. It was one of the many little ways I used Outlook's calendar function as a running to-do list (more than Tasks, I must admit). Now I see Outlook 2007 has consolidated the category functions across Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, etc, dramatically expanding the category choices - which is great. So, with one hand they giveth and with the other they taketh away. Not cool. I want a patch!" |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, no you didn't apply color categories in Outlook 2003 because it did
not support them - it’s a feature new to outlook 2007. If you applied colors, you used labels. FWIW, there shouldn't be a need to make appointments as finished - when the time has passed the appointment is finished unless you skipped out on it. If you just need reminders to follow up with no set time period for the meeting, you should be using tasks. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "On-Site MassageWorks" wrote in message ... "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote: Copy them so they break out of the recurrence and change the category of the single event. Or make individual events, not recurring. (Either make in Excel or make recurring in outlook, export to excel then import to convert to individual events.) Export here, import back again? SO not an elegant solution! I commented as much on another thread on the same basic topic: "In Outlook 2003, you could set up a recurring calendar item - obviously saves time over setting up individual calendar events - and tag the series with a colored-coded category. THEN, you could open up each instance of a recurrence and change the category color. Sounds rather idiosyncratic but... I relied heavily on this functionality in my small business. I'd set up A-B-C-D series with a color like 'important'. Date A would arrive and I'd know I needed to follow up with Person 1. Once that communication was satisfied, I could change the category color to 'none' which told me that the matter was resolved. Date B would arrive, and I'd repeat the process. It was one of the many little ways I used Outlook's calendar function as a running to-do list (more than Tasks, I must admit). Now I see Outlook 2007 has consolidated the category functions across Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, etc, dramatically expanding the category choices - which is great. So, with one hand they giveth and with the other they taketh away. Not cool. I want a patch!" |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "On-Site MassageWorks" wrote: "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote: Copy them so they break out of the recurrence and change the category of the single event. Or make individual events, not recurring. (Either make in Excel or make recurring in outlook, export to excel then import to convert to individual events.) Export here, import back again? SO not an elegant solution! I commented as much on another thread on the same basic topic: "In Outlook 2003, you could set up a recurring calendar item - obviously saves time over setting up individual calendar events - and tag the series with a colored-coded category. THEN, you could open up each instance of a recurrence and change the category color. Sounds rather idiosyncratic but... I relied heavily on this functionality in my small business. I'd set up A-B-C-D series with a color like 'important'. Date A would arrive and I'd know I needed to follow up with Person 1. Once that communication was satisfied, I could change the category color to 'none' which told me that the matter was resolved. Date B would arrive, and I'd repeat the process. It was one of the many little ways I used Outlook's calendar function as a running to-do list (more than Tasks, I must admit). Now I see Outlook 2007 has consolidated the category functions across Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, etc, dramatically expanding the category choices - which is great. So, with one hand they giveth and with the other they taketh away. Not cool. I want a patch!" |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We used Outlook 2003 in a similiar fashion to color code appointments/events
using the labels feature. Since MS saw fit to remote this capability, our solution was to remove Outlook 2007 and reinstall 2003. It taught us a valuable lesson - when MS comes out with a new version, don't use analyze the new features, but also ensure they did not change or delete a feature that we are relying on. After this problem and others with upgrading to new MS products, our IT Manager has directed us to look at other developers/vendors other than MS "On-Site MassageWorks" wrote: "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote: Copy them so they break out of the recurrence and change the category of the single event. Or make individual events, not recurring. (Either make in Excel or make recurring in outlook, export to excel then import to convert to individual events.) Export here, import back again? SO not an elegant solution! I commented as much on another thread on the same basic topic: "In Outlook 2003, you could set up a recurring calendar item - obviously saves time over setting up individual calendar events - and tag the series with a colored-coded category. THEN, you could open up each instance of a recurrence and change the category color. Sounds rather idiosyncratic but... I relied heavily on this functionality in my small business. I'd set up A-B-C-D series with a color like 'important'. Date A would arrive and I'd know I needed to follow up with Person 1. Once that communication was satisfied, I could change the category color to 'none' which told me that the matter was resolved. Date B would arrive, and I'd repeat the process. It was one of the many little ways I used Outlook's calendar function as a running to-do list (more than Tasks, I must admit). Now I see Outlook 2007 has consolidated the category functions across Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, etc, dramatically expanding the category choices - which is great. So, with one hand they giveth and with the other they taketh away. Not cool. I want a patch!" |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Meeting labeling | JGT | Outlook - Calandaring | 4 | May 19th 08 06:46 AM |
how do you delete a single occurance out of a reoccurring event | Dave | Outlook - Calandaring | 1 | July 24th 07 12:57 PM |
Labeling the times instead of the subject and time. | Emilio | Outlook - Calandaring | 0 | March 29th 07 09:06 PM |
Strange Email Occurance | ColTom2 | Outlook Express | 18 | January 14th 07 10:27 PM |
appointment occurance | Frosty | Outlook - Calandaring | 1 | May 30th 06 10:37 AM |