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#1
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With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command
button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
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#2
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If it's already published just open it using the custom MessageClass.
-- Ken Slovak [MVP - Outlook] http://www.slovaktech.com Author: Absolute Beginner's Guide to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Reminder Manager, Extended Reminders, Attachment Options http://www.slovaktech.com/products.htm "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#3
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You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection:
Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#4
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I tried to figure out how to do this by looking up MessageClass, but all
variations of the code I wrote didn't work. The form I open which has the command button is a Message Form and the command button points to an Appointment form whose Message class is "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". I just can't seem to format the code. "Ken Slovak - [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: If it's already published just open it using the custom MessageClass. -- Ken Slovak [MVP - Outlook] http://www.slovaktech.com Author: Absolute Beginner's Guide to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Reminder Manager, Extended Reminders, Attachment Options http://www.slovaktech.com/products.htm "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#5
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Hi Sue,
The form in question is an Appoinment form with a Message class of "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". My original code is below and worked beautifully in Form Design when running Forms, Run This Form. Once the form is published, it doesn't work because I'm pointing to an .OFT file and not the Message class. Sub CommandButton4_Click() Set myItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate _ ("C:\Documents and Settings\ldm\Application Data\Microsoft\Templates\IS Schedule Notification.oft") myItem.Display dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) myItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) myItem.Send End Sub "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection: Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#6
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Did you try the Items.Add method that I suggested?
-- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Hi Sue, The form in question is an Appoinment form with a Message class of "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". My original code is below and worked beautifully in Form Design when running Forms, Run This Form. Once the form is published, it doesn't work because I'm pointing to an .OFT file and not the Message class. Sub CommandButton4_Click() Set myItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate _ ("C:\Documents and Settings\ldm\Application Data\Microsoft\Templates\IS Schedule Notification.oft") myItem.Display dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) myItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) myItem.Send End Sub "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection: Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#7
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Yes, but since I'm limited to what I know, I couldn't figure out the
"targetFolder" part because when the form "IS Schedule Notification" opens, the To: is completed with four different users. This is what I tried to use, but the TargetFolder part wasn't working. Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification") "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you try the Items.Add method that I suggested? -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Hi Sue, The form in question is an Appoinment form with a Message class of "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". My original code is below and worked beautifully in Form Design when running Forms, Run This Form. Once the form is published, it doesn't work because I'm pointing to an .OFT file and not the Message class. Sub CommandButton4_Click() Set myItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate _ ("C:\Documents and Settings\ldm\Application Data\Microsoft\Templates\IS Schedule Notification.oft") myItem.Display dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) myItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) myItem.Send End Sub "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection: Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#8
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You might want to reread the 2nd part of my response, which explained which method to use to return an appropriate target folder.
-- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Yes, but since I'm limited to what I know, I couldn't figure out the "targetFolder" part because when the form "IS Schedule Notification" opens, the To: is completed with four different users. This is what I tried to use, but the TargetFolder part wasn't working. Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification") "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you try the Items.Add method that I suggested? "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Hi Sue, The form in question is an Appoinment form with a Message class of "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". My original code is below and worked beautifully in Form Design when running Forms, Run This Form. Once the form is published, it doesn't work because I'm pointing to an .OFT file and not the Message class. Sub CommandButton4_Click() Set myItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate _ ("C:\Documents and Settings\ldm\Application Data\Microsoft\Templates\IS Schedule Notification.oft") myItem.Display dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) myItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) myItem.Send End Sub "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection: Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
#9
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Look at Sue's response.
-- Ken Slovak [MVP - Outlook] http://www.slovaktech.com Author: Absolute Beginner's Guide to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Reminder Manager, Extended Reminders, Attachment Options http://www.slovaktech.com/products.htm "LDMueller" wrote in message ... I tried to figure out how to do this by looking up MessageClass, but all variations of the code I wrote didn't work. The form I open which has the command button is a Message Form and the command button points to an Appointment form whose Message class is "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". |
#10
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Hi Sue,
I did read the 2nd part of your reponse, but I just couldn't figure it out. So, what I did was write code to create a completed appointment as follows: Sub CommandButton4_Click() Const FormName = "IPM.Appointment" Dim oItem dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) Set oItem = Application.ActiveExplorer.CurrentFolder.Items.Add (FormName) oItem.Display strSubject = "Setup Equipment" Set myRecipient = oItem.Recipients.Add ("LDM") oItem.Subject = strSubject oItem.AllDayEvent = True oItem.ReminderSet = True oItem.ReminderMinutesBeforeStart = 180 oItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) oItem.Send End Sub This works perfectly with one exception. What is the code for "Show time as = Free". Thanks, LDMueller "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You might want to reread the 2nd part of my response, which explained which method to use to return an appropriate target folder. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Yes, but since I'm limited to what I know, I couldn't figure out the "targetFolder" part because when the form "IS Schedule Notification" opens, the To: is completed with four different users. This is what I tried to use, but the TargetFolder part wasn't working. Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification") "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Did you try the Items.Add method that I suggested? "LDMueller" wrote in message ... Hi Sue, The form in question is an Appoinment form with a Message class of "IPM.Appointment.IS Schedule Notification". My original code is below and worked beautifully in Form Design when running Forms, Run This Form. Once the form is published, it doesn't work because I'm pointing to an .OFT file and not the Message class. Sub CommandButton4_Click() Set myItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate _ ("C:\Documents and Settings\ldm\Application Data\Microsoft\Templates\IS Schedule Notification.oft") myItem.Display dte = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Date"), vbShortDate) tme = FormatDateTime(Item.UserProperties("Laptop Needed Time"), vbShortTime) myItem.Start = CDate(dte & " " & tme) myItem.Send End Sub "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: You don't need a path for the form. To create a new instance of a custom form programmatically, use the Add method on the target folder's Items collection: Set newItem = targetFolder.Items.Add("IPM.Post.YourFormName") If it's a message form, use the Drafts folder as the target. If the target is a default folder, you can use the Namespace.GetDefaultFolder method to return it as a MAPIFolder object. To create an item in another person's mailbox, use Namespace.GetSharedDefaultFolder to get the MAPIFolder Otherwise, you can use the code at http://www.outlookcode.com/d/code/getfolder.htm to walk the folder hierarchy and return the MAPIFolder corresponding to a given path string. Note that code on Outlook custom forms is VBScript, not VBA. "LDMueller" wrote in message ... With Outlook 2003 I have two published forms. My goal is to have a command button on one form which uses VBA code to open the other published form. My problem is I don't know what path to use to point to the other published form. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks so much! |
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