![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Anyone have ideas on the following?
To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties?
(Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are
guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and
still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Everything works fine here. I have no idea why you are renaming a PST file.
Never do that. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK, thanks for the suggestions, Russ.
If I find a fix, I will post it here. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Everything works fine here. I have no idea why you are renaming a PST file. Never do that. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an email address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I still think your problem is that you corrupt the connection between the
Outlook Address Book Service and its data files when you rename a PST. Just create a new profile from scratch and migrate your data file correctly. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... OK, thanks for the suggestions, Russ. If I find a fix, I will post it here. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Everything works fine here. I have no idea why you are renaming a PST file. Never do that. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks Russ,
As suggested, I tried a new profile without renaming my PST file; no luck. Would you explain step by step how you do a search that can find a contact in an additional/secondary contacts folder? Perhaps I am doing my searches incorrectly or differently. I'd like to copy your search steps exactly and see if this helps. Thx, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: I still think your problem is that you corrupt the connection between the Outlook Address Book Service and its data files when you rename a PST. Just create a new profile from scratch and migrate your data file correctly. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... OK, thanks for the suggestions, Russ. If I find a fix, I will post it here. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Everything works fine here. I have no idea why you are renaming a PST file. Never do that. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
There are no steps to list. Outlook's Search engine will search every
Contact Folder that has been included in the Outlook Address Book Service. You'll need to explain step by step how you configured your Outlook Address Book to include the Contact Folders that you think are not being searched. Also state whether you are using QuickFind, Find, or Advanced Find. The latter two allow you to target the folder you want to search. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Thanks Russ, As suggested, I tried a new profile without renaming my PST file; no luck. Would you explain step by step how you do a search that can find a contact in an additional/secondary contacts folder? Perhaps I am doing my searches incorrectly or differently. I'd like to copy your search steps exactly and see if this helps. Thx, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: I still think your problem is that you corrupt the connection between the Outlook Address Book Service and its data files when you rename a PST. Just create a new profile from scratch and migrate your data file correctly. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... OK, thanks for the suggestions, Russ. If I find a fix, I will post it here. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Everything works fine here. I have no idea why you are renaming a PST file. Never do that. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Russ, Thanks for the suggestions; I tried this and more (see below), and still no fix. Any other suggestions would be welcome. First I tried a new email profile as you suggested: 11) Quit Outlook. Rename outlook.pst from old profile, so it does not get picked up by new profile. 12) Start - Control Panel - Mail - Show Profiles - Add - "ContactsTest" - OK. 13) Add new directory or address book - Cancel (since Outlook.pst is automatically added when creating a new profile). 14) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) 15-19) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. Then I tried a new Windows User Account: 21) From Administrator account, Start- Control Panel - User Accounts - Create Account - "ContactsTester" - Limited - Create Account 22) Login to ContactsTester account. 23) Start Menu - Outlook. 24) Configure email account? - No (since not needed for this test) - Continue without email support? - Yes - "Creating Outlook data file....". 25-29) Same as steps 5 to 9 in my message below. So, no luck with these steps. Other suggestions? Also, if it's not too much trouble, would you mind checking the following on your computer? I understand you already use several contacts folders. If you: A) create a "New Mail Message", B) in the text box next to the "To..." button, type an email address; the address should be one you know to already exist in one of the additional contact folders (ie: a contact folder not named "Contacts"), C) click on "Check Names" so Outlook underlines the email address, D) right-click on this email address and select "Look up Outlook Contact", E) then does Outlook successfully find the matching contact? Thanks, Joel "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Why would you ever do all that? You have several steps in there that are guaranteed to corrupt an Outlook profile. Just create a new profile, open the PST file you want to use and configure it as your default, then reset the Outlook Address Book. Never do what you did in steps 2 and 3. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Yes, all my contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" enabled. Also, I've just found a simlar thread where "Lordcatalien" and "mv" both describe a similar situation, and you (Russ Valentine) suggested removing and re-adding the Outlook Address Book service. Here's what I did, to ensure that I was starting with a "clean slate": 1) Delete the Outlook Address Book service, and exit Outlook 2) Rename Outlook.NK2, Outlook.xml, and Outlook.pst files. 3) Restart Outlook, and when prompted, tell it to start with an empty PST file. 4) Enable Outlook Address Book service, quit Outlook, restart Outlook. 5) Find the automatically-created "Contacts" folder, create a second contacts folder"Contacts2", and ensure that both contacts folders have "Show this folder as an email address book" checked. Also, verified that both folders do show up in Address Book - Tooks - Options. 6) Create one contact in each folder in Contacts, and in Contacts2) 7) Create a new email, type in these 2 addresses in the "To..." line, and click on the "Check Names" icon so the addresses will be underlined 8) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This successfully showed the contact information from the Contacts folder. 9) Right-click on in the email, and selected "Lookup Outlook Contact". This nstead gave "Could not find a contact with this address", not showing the contact information from the Contacts2 folder. Other ideas, anyone? I'd really love to have these searches working better. Joel PS: Sorry for the delay in this post.. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you enable these folders as email address book in their properties? (Hint: Outlook Address Book Tab). -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Joel Leonhardt" wrote in message ... Anyone have ideas on the following? To better manage my contacts, I created several contact sub-folders (eg: Friends, Family, etc). I did this by selecting the original Contacts folder, right-clicking, and selecting "New Folder". I then moved many contacts into these sub-folders. But when I right-click on an email address (FROM/TO/CC) in an address, and select "look up outlook contact", I can only lookup contacts in my original Contacts folder. Anyone have any idea how I can make this search work on all contacts folders? As far as I can see (via Properties), these folders are identical to the original Contacts folder. I also tried moving these folders to the root folder of this PST file, but no change. I know outlook tracks the original Contacts folder as a "special folder", since I am not allowed to move/delete/rename that folder. Does this mean that the "look up outlook contact" function can only ever work for this one folder? Or if I cannot search multiple contact folders, do people have other ideas for grouping contacts? I already use "Categories", but I ended up with about 50 Categories and wanted an additional layer of grouping. Thanks in advance for any help. Joel |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Only when i forward emails with attachements "550 relaying mail to" [domain] "is not allowed" | Alchemy | Outlook - General Queries | 4 | March 8th 06 11:47 PM |
"In Folders Other than the Inbox, save replies with original message" Setting | mike kline | Outlook - General Queries | 3 | February 5th 06 03:08 AM |
Does Microsoft TAPI support "+" as a phone prefix for a Contact | Simon Maxwell | Outlook - Using Contacts | 1 | January 13th 06 11:13 AM |
My Contact "categories" (custom) are no longer shown in Master. | [email protected] | Outlook - Using Contacts | 1 | January 11th 06 10:24 PM |
Don't use "X" in outlook as delete icon, it looks like "close" | HuskieChem | Outlook - Installation | 1 | January 9th 06 02:02 AM |