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#1
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My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt
her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
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#2
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Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to
the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
#3
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Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem.
Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the import from B is done? -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
#4
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Addresses will not be modified. If you have an old address for someone and
it changed, you will end up with both. You can export B and import it to A and then export the new A and import that into B, (phew, I think you can), but that will only do addresses. Courtesy of Jim Pickering, MVP-Outlook Express Create a "standalone" WAB file: http://insideoe.tomsterdam.com/files/wab.htm#wabexe Then open your default address book to the group desired and select all member of the group and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+A selects all, Ctrl+C copies them to the clipboard). Then open your "standalone" WAB file and paste the contacts into that file (you will have to hit the Enter key to OK each entry but it beats typing) and then either copy that wab file to a floppy disc or export it as CSV file. Otherwise, folders and groups neither import, nor export. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem. Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the import from B is done? -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
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Thanks again, Bruce. The pieces are slowly falling into place.
From what you have said below, I thought that folders could not be imported. However, I just found an old empty .wab file on my wife's computer and imported her current ABook into it, and all folders appear to have been successfully imported. To avoid possible problems with exporting/importing folders, however, I propose to export B and import it to A. I presume that you then suggested that we export the new A and import it into B so that the desired (updated) ABook is in the default OE location -- is that correct? Given my experience above, perhaps we should delete all the addresses in B before importing from A, so that (hopefully) the folders will also be imported into B from A. Otherwise, would it be safe (having backed up both files g) to move the updated file A.wab so that it simply replaces B.wab in the OE default location? Thanks again for your help. -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Addresses will not be modified. If you have an old address for someone and it changed, you will end up with both. You can export B and import it to A and then export the new A and import that into B, (phew, I think you can), but that will only do addresses. Courtesy of Jim Pickering, MVP-Outlook Express Create a "standalone" WAB file: http://insideoe.tomsterdam.com/files/wab.htm#wabexe Then open your default address book to the group desired and select all member of the group and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+A selects all, Ctrl+C copies them to the clipboard). Then open your "standalone" WAB file and paste the contacts into that file (you will have to hit the Enter key to OK each entry but it beats typing) and then either copy that wab file to a floppy disc or export it as CSV file. Otherwise, folders and groups neither import, nor export. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem. Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the import from B is done? -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
#6
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Hi,
Just a thought. Make a copy of each address book file, then experiment with the copies. Ken "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... | Thanks again, Bruce. The pieces are slowly falling into place. | | From what you have said below, I thought that folders could not be imported. | However, I just found an old empty .wab file on my wife's computer and | imported her current ABook into it, and all folders appear to have been | successfully imported. | | To avoid possible problems with exporting/importing folders, however, I | propose to export B and import it to A. I presume that you then suggested | that we export the new A and import it into B so that the desired (updated) | ABook is in the default OE location -- is that correct? Given my experience | above, perhaps we should delete all the addresses in B before importing from | A, so that (hopefully) the folders will also be imported into B from A. | Otherwise, would it be safe (having backed up both files g) to move the | updated file A.wab so that it simply replaces B.wab in the OE default | location? | | Thanks again for your help. | | -- | Lindsay Graham | | "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message | ... | Addresses will not be modified. If you have an old address for someone and | it changed, you will end up with both. You can export B and import it to A | and then export the new A and import that into B, (phew, I think you can), | but that will only do addresses. | | Courtesy of Jim Pickering, MVP-Outlook Express | | Create a "standalone" WAB file: | http://insideoe.tomsterdam.com/files/wab.htm#wabexe | | Then open your default address book to the group desired and select all | member of the group and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+A selects all, | Ctrl+C copies them to the clipboard). Then open your "standalone" WAB | file and paste the contacts into that file (you will have to hit the Enter | key to OK each entry but it beats typing) and then either copy that wab | file to a floppy disc or export it as CSV file. Otherwise, folders and | groups neither import, nor export. | -- | | Bruce Hagen | MS-MVP Outlook Express | Imperial Beach, CA | | | "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message | ... | Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem. | | Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in | folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual | addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. | She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. | It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, | because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in | which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would | not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm | not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. | | If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are | already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, | would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the | import from B is done? | | -- | Lindsay Graham | | "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message | ... | Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point | to | the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and | leave the addresses already there alone. | -- | | Bruce Hagen | MS-MVP Outlook Express | Imperial Beach, CA | | | "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message | ... | My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop | rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and | her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the | addresses | (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders | in | which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. | | I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the | folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in | her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that | the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the | new addresses? | | Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. | | -- | Lindsay Graham | Canberra, Australia | | | | |
#7
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Really, whatever way works best. Regardless of how you do it, you will
probably end up with addresses you no longer need, but can easily delete them. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thanks again, Bruce. The pieces are slowly falling into place. From what you have said below, I thought that folders could not be imported. However, I just found an old empty .wab file on my wife's computer and imported her current ABook into it, and all folders appear to have been successfully imported. To avoid possible problems with exporting/importing folders, however, I propose to export B and import it to A. I presume that you then suggested that we export the new A and import it into B so that the desired (updated) ABook is in the default OE location -- is that correct? Given my experience above, perhaps we should delete all the addresses in B before importing from A, so that (hopefully) the folders will also be imported into B from A. Otherwise, would it be safe (having backed up both files g) to move the updated file A.wab so that it simply replaces B.wab in the OE default location? Thanks again for your help. -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Addresses will not be modified. If you have an old address for someone and it changed, you will end up with both. You can export B and import it to A and then export the new A and import that into B, (phew, I think you can), but that will only do addresses. Courtesy of Jim Pickering, MVP-Outlook Express Create a "standalone" WAB file: http://insideoe.tomsterdam.com/files/wab.htm#wabexe Then open your default address book to the group desired and select all member of the group and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+A selects all, Ctrl+C copies them to the clipboard). Then open your "standalone" WAB file and paste the contacts into that file (you will have to hit the Enter key to OK each entry but it beats typing) and then either copy that wab file to a floppy disc or export it as CSV file. Otherwise, folders and groups neither import, nor export. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem. Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the import from B is done? -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
#8
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Really, whatever way works best. Regardless of how you do it, you will
probably end up with addresses you no longer need, but can easily delete them. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thanks again, Bruce. The pieces are slowly falling into place. From what you have said below, I thought that folders could not be imported. However, I just found an old empty .wab file on my wife's computer and imported her current ABook into it, and all folders appear to have been successfully imported. To avoid possible problems with exporting/importing folders, however, I propose to export B and import it to A. I presume that you then suggested that we export the new A and import it into B so that the desired (updated) ABook is in the default OE location -- is that correct? Given my experience above, perhaps we should delete all the addresses in B before importing from A, so that (hopefully) the folders will also be imported into B from A. Otherwise, would it be safe (having backed up both files g) to move the updated file A.wab so that it simply replaces B.wab in the OE default location? Thanks again for your help. -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Addresses will not be modified. If you have an old address for someone and it changed, you will end up with both. You can export B and import it to A and then export the new A and import that into B, (phew, I think you can), but that will only do addresses. Courtesy of Jim Pickering, MVP-Outlook Express Create a "standalone" WAB file: http://insideoe.tomsterdam.com/files/wab.htm#wabexe Then open your default address book to the group desired and select all member of the group and copy them to the clipboard (Ctrl+A selects all, Ctrl+C copies them to the clipboard). Then open your "standalone" WAB file and paste the contacts into that file (you will have to hit the Enter key to OK each entry but it beats typing) and then either copy that wab file to a floppy disc or export it as CSV file. Otherwise, folders and groups neither import, nor export. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... Thank you, Bruce. However, I'm not sure that that will fix her problem. Basically, she had an old Address Book (call it A) with many addresses in folders. Her new Address Book (call it B) has all the same individual addresses in it, with some additions and modifications, but no folders. She wants to have all the addresses in B allocated to the folders in A. It would be very difficult to manually recreate the folders from B in A, because she does not have any other record of which addresses were put in which folders. You have suggested an import from A to B -- this would not add any new addresses, because B is more up-to-date than A, and I'm not sure whether it would add the folders that exist in A. If we do it the other way around (ie, import B into A), the folders are already in B and I assume that new addresses would be added. However, would addresses that have been modified in B be updated in A when the import from B is done? -- Lindsay Graham "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Open the new Address Book. File | Import | Address Book (wab) and point to the old one. The import will add all the addresses from the old AB and leave the addresses already there alone. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Lindsay Graham" wrote in message ... My colleague's computer blew up recently and the local computer shop rebuilt her hard drive and reinstalled all programs. She uses OE6 and her problem is that her new Address Book seems to have all the addresses (she has several thousand) that were there previously, but the folders in which she had the addresses previously have disappeared. I searched her hard drive and found the original Address Book with the folders. However, she has now added and updated etc many addresses in her new Address Book. How can she combine both Address Books, so that the end result is an Address Book with all the old folders and all the new addresses? Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Lindsay Graham Canberra, Australia |
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