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Tracking Attachment File Names
I posted the following to this group in May last year but didn't get a nibble. I'll try again in the hope that someone has crossed a bridge or two in the mean time: Why is Outlook 2003 so reluctant to expose details of attachments to the user? I would like to be able to search for, view, and print a report that targets the file names of attachments. The attachment file name only appears on a printed message if the message is formatted as plain text. Even then, the file name is only fully displayed if it is not too long to fit in the space allocated. As for being able to search for a file name, to see which message(s) contained that attachment, that just seems too hard. Utilities that strip attachments from messages and then insert a text string in the message body to record the file name seem to offer some hope of doing what I need. At least you could then search for an attachment file name amongst all messages. The Sperry Utility does insert the file name into the message body, but that application seems not to work with some messages. The MapiLab Utility also looked hopeful, but after converting the file name to text, it then enters it back into the message as an attachment. I would really appreciate hearing of some way to track the file names of attachments to Outlook messages, particularly if this is combined with an elegant attachment stripping utility. Andyh |
#2
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"AndyH" wrote in message
... Tracking Attachment File Names Utilities that strip attachments from messages and then insert a text string in the message body to record the file name seem to offer some hope of doing what I need. At least you could then search for an attachment file name amongst all messages. The Sperry Utility does insert the file name into the message body, but that application seems not to work with some messages. Not sure why the Sperry util has problems. Most often, this type of issue is to do with the Outlook data and running scanpst will fix it up. However, you might like to try our attachment stripper, to see if you get more success: http://www.lbetoolbox.com/attachstrip.htm -- John Blessing http://www.LbeHelpdesk.com - Help Desk software priced to suit all businesses http://www.room-booking-software.com - Schedule rooms & equipment bookings for your meeting/class over the web. http://www.lbetoolbox.com - Remove Duplicates from MS Outlook, find/replace, send newsletters |
#3
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Before I try your product perhaps you could allow me to pose the
following situation. I have a public folder with approx 16,000 messages in it. I know that somewhere amongst these emails there is one that contains a vital attachment file, say HiValue-0073.zip. There are no other clues to what message might contain that attachment. Which message contains the attachment? This is the sort of scenario I am trying to field. Do you think your product could offer a solution here? Regards, AndyH On Mon, 02 Apr 2007 07:44:30 GMT, "John Blessing" wrote: "AndyH" wrote in message .. . Tracking Attachment File Names Utilities that strip attachments from messages and then insert a text string in the message body to record the file name seem to offer some hope of doing what I need. At least you could then search for an attachment file name amongst all messages. The Sperry Utility does insert the file name into the message body, but that application seems not to work with some messages. Not sure why the Sperry util has problems. Most often, this type of issue is to do with the Outlook data and running scanpst will fix it up. However, you might like to try our attachment stripper, to see if you get more success: http://www.lbetoolbox.com/attachstrip.htm |
#4
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![]() "AndyH" wrote in message ... Before I try your product perhaps you could allow me to pose the following situation. I have a public folder with approx 16,000 messages in it. I know that somewhere amongst these emails there is one that contains a vital attachment file, say HiValue-0073.zip. There are no other clues to what message might contain that attachment. Which message contains the attachment? This is the sort of scenario I am trying to field. Do you think your product could offer a solution here? Regards, AndyH If you stripped the attachment first, it would then put a link to the stripped file into the message, then you could do a search for it. A bit cumbersome. The only alternative is custom code. Contact me by email at www.lbesoftware.com/contact.asp if you are interested -- John Blessing http://www.LbeHelpdesk.com - Help Desk software priced to suit all businesses http://www.room-booking-software.com - Schedule rooms & equipment bookings for your meeting/class over the web. http://www.lbetoolbox.com - Remove Duplicates from MS Outlook, find/replace, send newsletters |
#5
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Thanks, I ended up sorting it out with some help :
this is the info that solved it : Step 2: Mark your contact folder for use with your address book 1. On the File menu, point to Folder, and then click Properties for your folder name. 2. On the Outlook Address Book tab, click to select the Show this folder as an e-mail address book check box, type a descriptive name, and then click OK. cheers, Brian Canham "John Blessing" wrote in message news ![]() "AndyH" wrote in message ... Before I try your product perhaps you could allow me to pose the following situation. I have a public folder with approx 16,000 messages in it. I know that somewhere amongst these emails there is one that contains a vital attachment file, say HiValue-0073.zip. There are no other clues to what message might contain that attachment. Which message contains the attachment? This is the sort of scenario I am trying to field. Do you think your product could offer a solution here? Regards, AndyH If you stripped the attachment first, it would then put a link to the stripped file into the message, then you could do a search for it. A bit cumbersome. The only alternative is custom code. Contact me by email at www.lbesoftware.com/contact.asp if you are interested -- John Blessing http://www.LbeHelpdesk.com - Help Desk software priced to suit all businesses http://www.room-booking-software.com - Schedule rooms & equipment bookings for your meeting/class over the web. http://www.lbetoolbox.com - Remove Duplicates from MS Outlook, find/replace, send newsletters |
#6
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Hi-Soft wrote:
Thanks, I ended up sorting it out with some help : this is the info that solved it : Step 2: Mark your contact folder for use with your address book 1. On the File menu, point to Folder, and then click Properties for your folder name. 2. On the Outlook Address Book tab, click to select the Show this folder as an e-mail address book check box, type a descriptive name, and then click OK. Wrong thread. -- Brian Tillman |
#7
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AndyH wrote:
Before I try your product perhaps you could allow me to pose the following situation. I have a public folder with approx 16,000 messages in it. I know that somewhere amongst these emails there is one that contains a vital attachment file, say HiValue-0073.zip. There are no other clues to what message might contain that attachment. Which message contains the attachment? This seems doable enough with plain Outlook. Just sort the list by the attachment icon. All messages with attachments will be collected together. If there aren't a lot of them, you should be able to find it in a few minutes. -- Brian Tillman |
#8
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On Mon, 2 Apr 2007 08:15:01 -0400, "Brian Tillman"
wrote: AndyH wrote: Before I try your product perhaps you could allow me to pose the following situation. I have a public folder with approx 16,000 messages in it. I know that somewhere amongst these emails there is one that contains a vital attachment file, say HiValue-0073.zip. There are no other clues to what message might contain that attachment. Which message contains the attachment? This seems doable enough with plain Outlook. Just sort the list by the attachment icon. All messages with attachments will be collected together. If there aren't a lot of them, you should be able to find it in a few minutes. I just checked my emails that have attachments. 54 percent have attachments. That still leaves 8,640 emails to check one by one for the lost attachment ![]() AndyH |
#9
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windows desktop search indexes outlook attachments. easy.
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