Do you have other code that declares the ReplyMail object at the module level
and instantiates it? If not, Outlook has no way of knowing what ReplyMail
refers to (and neither do we, because we don't know whether you want a macro
that replies to a current message or whether you want a macro that acts on
the currently display message).
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Microsoft Outlook Programming: Jumpstart
for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx
"Bert" wrote:
Hi Sue,
I am getting a Run-time error 424.
Sub ms()
ReplyMail.Subject = "#ms#"
End Sub
Is this how I should have macro. Thanks for your help.
Bert
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:
Just as the + operator is used to add two numbers together, the & operator is
used to join two strings together:
ReplyMail.Subject = "#ms#" & ReplyMail.Subject
"Bert" wrote:
I am new to this I am stumped at the following:
Sub ms()
ReplyMail.Subject = "#ms#"(remainder of the subject)
End Sub
Thanks for your assistance.
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:
Though no macro recorder is available (and the same is true for most Office programs), there is a huge amount of Outlook sample code available, included that in the Help system itself. Where in particular are you stumped?
"Bert" wrote in message ...
I'm having problems with the Outllok Codes, since Outlooks does not record
macros. The #ms# would follow the standard prefix.
"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:
Where are you encountering problems? Exactly how do you want the Subject line to look -- does #ms# replace, precede, or follow the standard prefix?
"Bert" wrote in message ...
Hello. I am having a challenging time creating a macro in Outlook. I'm
trying to create a macro when replying to an email, in the Subject line will
automatically populate #ms#. Which MS is how our Mail Secure of how
confidential data flows through.