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Author: FrankFrank Date: Mar 10, 2008 15:58
I lost my hard drive last week and had it rebuilt. Fortunately, I had all of
my contacts saved. Before this happened, I could enter a contact phone
number as such (905) 667 - 4301 Note the spaces. I do this intentionally to
make it easy to read. All of my contacts that were previously entered still
display as above with spaces. The problem I now have is that when I enter a
phone number with spaces, outlook automatically removes them so that it look
like: (905) 667-4301 It lets me enter the spaces but as soon as I press
"ENTER", it remeves them. Help please !!! I have looked everywhere for the
solution to this problem but can't find it. Using Outlook 2003 Professional
with Windows XP Professional
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Author: Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] Date: Mar 10, 2008 18:54
You must set your default dialing location for the operating system before
Outlook will format your phone numbers.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Frank" discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:3DA0C551-2BDC-4B16-A3BF-B1C1DD026417@microsoft.com...
>I lost my hard drive last week and had it rebuilt...
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Author: FrankFrank Date: May 29, 2008 08:00
Thanks Russ and sorry for the delay, but You were not specific enough for me.
I went into Outlook help, typed "set default dialing location" and tried a
bunch of stuff but no luck. Can you please give me a few more details.
Thanks,
"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:
> You must set your default dialing location for the operating system before
> Outlook will format your phone numbers.
>
> --
> Russ Valentine
> [MVP-Outlook]
> "Frank"
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Author: Brian TillmanBrian Tillman Date: May 29, 2008 11:34
Frank discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> Thanks Russ and sorry for the delay, but You were not specific enough
> for me. I went into Outlook help, typed "set default dialing
> location" and tried a bunch of stuff but no luck. Can you please
> give me a few more details.
It's not an Outlook function, it;s a Windows function. Start>Control
Panel>Printers and Other Hardware>Phone and Modem Options. Of course, you
can also get at it from within Outlook. While viewing the Contacts folder,
click Actions>Call Contact>New Call>Dialing Properties
--
Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
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Author: FrankFrank Date: May 31, 2008 07:30
I did that from both Outlook and Windows. It has not solved my problem. I
have set my default dialing location and selected "Apply" & "OK") I have
re-started my computer twice. No luck. I still can't format phone numbers
with spaces. It must be possible because I was able to do it with the same
computer & the same systems for years. What am I missing please. Tim
Horton's gift certificate card to whom ever can solve this. I promise.
"Brian Tillman" wrote:
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Author: Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] Date: May 31, 2008 07:58
I don't understand your question. There are spaces where there should be.
Why do you say there aren't? Outlook is formatting the phone number in
standard format which is what it should do. That's what Outlook has always
done. How Outlook masks phone numbers is hard coded.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Frank" discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:D38720B4-2DDC-491F-9271-51776FE2B7DA@microsoft.com...
>I did that from both Outlook and Windows. It has not solved my problem. I
> have set my default dialing location and selected "Apply" & "OK") I have
> re-started my computer twice. No luck. I still can't format phone
> numbers
> with spaces. It must be possible because I was able to do it with the
> same
> computer & the same systems for years. What am I missing please. Tim
> Horton's gift certificate card to whom ever can solve this. I promise.
>
> "Brian Tillman" wrote:
> ...
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Author: FrankFrank Date: Jun 1, 2008 11:07
ok & thanks again for working on this with me. Basically, your latest
question to my problem is my problem. Outlook is "now" formatting my phone
numbers in my contacts the way it wants to. (This was not the case a month
ago) I can't alter them the way I want to. I type them as (905) 123 - 4567
but Microsoft Outlook is changing them to (905) 123-4567. That is my
problem. I wish them to remain as and stay as (905) 123 - 4567 (notice the
spaces between the "3" and "-" as well as the "-" and the "4". I need them
store that way for a reason. I can see them & read them better. I have
dyslexia and have to function with it. My contacts are also viewable on my
BlackBerry but everything is so small...hard to see. The spaces make sense
for me & help me. For years, this was not...
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Author: Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] Date: Jun 1, 2008 13:53
Outlook has always formatted phone numbers this way because that is standard
international format. Outlook does not permit you to use a non-standard
format and never has because telephony dialers require that format. If you
need to store the numbers in non-standard format, use a different, non-phone
field so Outlook won't mask it, or place the number in quotes.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Frank" discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:65A7F50B-FEF0-48DD-A1B3-2FE184F0DC93@microsoft.com...
> ok & thanks again for working on this with me. Basically, your latest
> question to my problem is my problem. Outlook is "now" formatting my
> phone
> numbers in my contacts the way it wants to. (This was not the case a
> month
> ago) I can't alter them the way I want to. I type them as (905) 123 -
> 4567
> but Microsoft Outlook is changing them to (905) 123-4567. That is my
> problem. I wish them to remain as and stay as (905) 123 - 4567 (notice
> the ...
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Author: FrankFrank Date: Jun 2, 2008 12:39
ok, we are getting closer to understanding what is going on. Once again,
your answer has led me to understand another thing. You are right, once you
set up your "dialing properties" in Microsoft, and you click the "radio
button" under "locations", you are done for. From that point on, you can't
change the way phone numbers are store for you in contacts (unless, as you
suggested, you use " " or * or.....I do not wish to do this!!!) There lies
the answer to my problem. How do we "uncheck" that radio button. I went to
a number of other computers on my floor and experimented. If no one has gone
into "dialing properties" and "checked" their "radio button" on a computer,
you can enter a phone number in contacts any which way you want. As many
spaces as you want, where ever you want. This is what I wish to do. But
once you "check" that button, Microsoft will only save the phone number for
you one way (formatted) I have proven this on 5 different computers. By the
way, no one here uses their computer to dial out. We are not configured for
that. We still use good old fashioned telephones and fax machines. Since
they re-built my hard drive last month, someone (&^%%$*^@)must have gone into
my "dialing properties" and "checked" my radio button. Hence my problem.
How do I "uncheck" it. I tried a bunch of stuff but no luck. Once again, I
am true to my words and my Tim's card offer still stands. (This is driving
me nuts) !!! ...
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Author: Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] Date: Jun 2, 2008 13:01
You cannot "unset" that option. Nor can you leave dialing options unset if
you plan to use phone number fields because Outlook will prompt you
continuously to set it until you do.
You must use one of the options I listed to store numbers in non-standard
format. Sorry. That's just the way it is.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Frank" discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:1631EC20-A78C-4BC9-8011-7A9C2120AC41@microsoft.com...
> ok, we are getting closer to understanding what is going on. Once again,
> your answer has led me to understand another thing. You are right, once
> you
> set up your "dialing properties" in Microsoft, and you click the "radio
> button" under "locations", you are done for. From that point on, you
> can't
> change the way phone numbers are store for you in contacts (unless, as you
> suggested, you use " " or * or.....I do not wish to do this!!!) There
> lies
> the answer to my problem. How do we "uncheck" that radio button. I went ...
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