![]() |
Creating Internal forms
I am trying to create a form that a user fills out. Sends it to their
supervisor. the supervisor then finishes the form (its a Time Off request sheet, he as to approve it), then he is able to send it to the HR department. Everyone who uses the form will be using Outlook in an exchange environment. I created a form that looks the same in both the compose and read pages. But when I fill out the form in the compose and send it, the receiver just gets the blank form. How do I connect the fields from the compose page to fields on the read page? |
Creating Internal forms
Use the Value tab on each control's Properties dialog to bind each control to the correct Outlook field. You need to publish the form to the Organizational Forms library, with the "Send form definition with item" box unchecked.
-- 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 "Kevin Porter" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a form that a user fills out. Sends it to their supervisor. the supervisor then finishes the form (its a Time Off request sheet, he as to approve it), then he is able to send it to the HR department. Everyone who uses the form will be using Outlook in an exchange environment. I created a form that looks the same in both the compose and read pages. But when I fill out the form in the compose and send it, the receiver just gets the blank form. How do I connect the fields from the compose page to fields on the read page? |
Creating Internal forms
Thank you for yoour lightning response.
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Use the Value tab on each control's Properties dialog to bind each control to the correct Outlook field. You need to publish the form to the Organizational Forms library, with the "Send form definition with item" box unchecked. -- 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 "Kevin Porter" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a form that a user fills out. Sends it to their supervisor. the supervisor then finishes the form (its a Time Off request sheet, he as to approve it), then he is able to send it to the HR department. Everyone who uses the form will be using Outlook in an exchange environment. I created a form that looks the same in both the compose and read pages. But when I fill out the form in the compose and send it, the receiver just gets the blank form. How do I connect the fields from the compose page to fields on the read page? |
Creating Internal forms
In article ,
=?Utf-8?B?S2V2aW4gUG9ydGVy?= wrote: I created a form that looks the same in both the compose and read pages. But when I fill out the form in the compose and send it, the receiver just gets the blank form. How do I connect the fields from the compose page to fields on the read page? For future use, you avoid all these problems by not using a split form design. Make sure, before you design any controls that the form is not split into compose and read forms. Uncheck the box on the forms menu that says to use separate forms. If the form is not split, then anything you see in the compose form, will be visible in the read form. If you do want to use a split form, the design all the common elements in unsplit form mode, and the add the unique elements to each form afterwards. That way the values in the common controls will auto-load from the compose to the read form. -- Hollis Paul Mukilteo, WA USA |
Creating Internal forms
Thanks I did not know I could do that. I changed the setting on my current
form. Now I just have to figure out how to give myself permission to publish to OFL. "Hollis Paul" wrote: In article , =?Utf-8?B?S2V2aW4gUG9ydGVy?= wrote: I created a form that looks the same in both the compose and read pages. But when I fill out the form in the compose and send it, the receiver just gets the blank form. How do I connect the fields from the compose page to fields on the read page? For future use, you avoid all these problems by not using a split form design. Make sure, before you design any controls that the form is not split into compose and read forms. Uncheck the box on the forms menu that says to use separate forms. If the form is not split, then anything you see in the compose form, will be visible in the read form. If you do want to use a split form, the design all the common elements in unsplit form mode, and the add the unique elements to each form afterwards. That way the values in the common controls will auto-load from the compose to the read form. -- Hollis Paul Mukilteo, WA USA |
Creating Internal forms
In article ,
=?Utf-8?B?S2V2aW4gUG9ydGVy?= wrote: Thanks I did not know I could do that. I changed the setting on my current form. Now I just have to figure out how to give myself permission to publish to OFL. The Exchange Administrator is supposed to do that. If that is you, then you need to search the Exchange admin help file for Organizational Forms Library, and you will find the details of how to create the file and how to set permissions for it. -- Hollis Paul Mukilteo, WA USA |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:33 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 2.4.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 OutlookBanter.com