Bug: Outlook 15.32 For Mac Drag And Drop Email In Both Folders

 Posted admin

If I click on an e-mail and then click on “Move to”, the drop down shows all my folders. Yet, I can’t see them to the left side of my Inbox, nor access them. Not sure what is going on. Drag Lock works with both the 'one-finger tap & drag' and the 'three-finger drag'. When enabled, the drag does not end after lifting your finger(s) from the trackpad. Rather you have to tap/click the trackpad to end the drag. Drag and Drop Stops Working in Outlook (or Windows or Lync). I confirmed drag and drop wasnt working in Outlook, pressed ESC once, and drag and drop started working in both Outlook and Lync. (Win 7, Outlook 2010, Lync 2010). I am at work and suddently i could not drag and drop the emails from outlook anymore and i found this, presed. Drag and drop is an essential feature on the Mac that is used frequently for interactions in the OS X Finder and throughout other applications, so obviously if drag and drop stops working seemingly out of the blue, you’ll want to resolve that fairly quickly. For example, every email account has a sent, draft, flagged folder and to avoid having to go to each account’s folders and searching, the user could create a new folder, name it what you’d like and then choose from each accounts folders to collect the emails.

Outlook

15 years ago User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.6b) Gecko/20031201 Firebird/0.7+ Build Identifier: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.6b) Gecko/20031201 Firebird/0.7+ AFAIK Thunderbird is not able to drag and drop messages outside of the application. It should be possible to drop emails into the filesystem or into text editors with predictable results. Here is what I would like to see: 1. If I drag a message onto my desktop, it should make a file called [subject].eml, which contains the exact code of the message. Also, and I don't know if this is yet possible, but Thunderbird should be able to open messages ending with.eml just as Outlook Express or Outlook can. Both of those clients support this kind of drag and drop.

Also (and slightly less important), if you drop a message onto a text editor like notepad (or I daresay MS Word), it should put the contents of the message into the document. Both of these are somewhat mentioned (though not very clearly) in. Reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: 1. Select a message from a mail folder 2.

Drag it to a folder or the desktop 3. Drag it to a text editor window Actual Results: Nothing.

Publisher for mac free. Expected Results: Should put make a file or place the contents of the email, depending on which you are doing. 15 years ago The.eml files created by Outlook Express consist of the exact message source put into a file which happens to have the.eml extension. Any extension would be fine, but this format makes the most sense. I'm not completely sure, but I think mbox format is just a series of messages in this format anyway. Right now I export all of my emails to my filesystem on a quarterly basis for archives. Image and photo editing software. To do this, I have to switch to OE because Thunderbird doesn't support drag and drop.

It already supports saving files as.eml files, but I'd have to save each of them individually. There needs to be a way to save multiple messages to this format at once, and drag and drop is probably the way to go. The advantage to using.eml though is that Outlook Express would also be able to open the files if you sent them to a user who didn't use Thunderbird. Also, Thunderbird should be able to open these files. It has support for opening saved files in the formats of.eml and.msg, but I can't get external opening to work (as in double-clicking on a file and it opening in Thinderbird).

This should be fixed, but I'll need to add another bug for it. 14 years ago (In reply to ) > 1. If I drag a message onto my desktop, it should make a file called > [subject].eml, which contains the exact code of the message.

> Thunderbird should be able to open messages ending with.eml It can open them, sort of, but not via drag-n-drop (seamonkey ). Also (and slightly less important), if you drop a message onto a text > editor[.] it should put the contents of the message into the document. > Both of these are somewhat mentioned (though not very clearly) in 218587 is *exactly* your item #2; it's quite clear. Changing summary of bug to focus on item #1.

> Was about dragging attachments, duped eventually to which was fixed. 13 years ago The ability to drag and drop messages to the windows file system is something that would help my company greatly. I am forced to use outlook express because of this feature.