UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10105) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/51.0.2704.79 Safari/537.36 Steps to reproduce the problem: 1. Open Chrome, highlight URL (or command-A) and then copy (or command-C) from address bar 2. Switch to Outlook (I'm using 2011 but I've seen reports on other versions) 3.
Outlook for Mac brings the familiarity of the Office suite to Mac users, however unlike its PC counterpart, it does not natively support Google app This can be incredibly frustrating for Mac and Outlook users who use Google's web-based calendar service. However, there is a workaround using. I'm experiencing this issue as well. I cannot paste a URL directly from the URL bar on Chrome on Mac to the email body of a message in Outlook. Instead, I need to paste it to the subject line, a new tab, or a text file, then copy the text again. At that point, I can paste it into the Outlook email body.
Start a new email (HTML format) and move to body of email 4. Edit Paste (or command-V) - notice nothing. occurs 5.
Edit Paste and Match Style (or FN-SHIFT-OPT-COMMAND-V) - notice URL appears in email 6. Move to Subject 7. Paste (command-V) - notice URL appears in Subject Line 8.
Draft uncheck HTML format and click Yes - observe that URL is in body (.from step 4 where it looked like nothing happened) What is the expected behavior? Expect in step 4 for URL to appear in body. In step 1, replace 'Chrome' with 'Safari' or 'Firefox' or 'older version of Chrome' to see the expected behavior What went wrong? There is some weird encoding in the URL in the address bar of the current version of Mac Chrome that prevents the typical expected ability to simply paste a URL into Chrome. (I've not seen first hand but it sounds like it also impacts Lotus Notes.) Did this work before?
Yes maybe a few days ago? Chrome version: 51.0.2704.79 Channel: stable OS Version: OS X 10.10.5 Flash Version: Shockwave Flash 21.0 r0 Chatter on Google Product Groups is picking up suggesting it's just now hit Stable. Processing Cc: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Labels: -Pri-2 M-51 ReleaseBlock-Stable Pri-1 Status: Untriaged (was: Unconfirmed) James@, thank you for the report.
I am able to reproduce this issue on Chrome Stable#51.0.2704.79/84 as well as on Latest Canary#53.0.2764.0 for Mac OS X 10.11.5. This seems to be a recent regression and working fine on previous stable#50.0.2661.102. Working on finding a narrow bisect. PS: I am using Outlook 2011 for the repro. Processing Cc: [email protected] erikchen@ - I was looking at ClipboardUtil::AddDataToPasteboard: void ClipboardUtil::AddDataToPasteboard(NSPasteboard. pboard, NSPasteboardItem. item) NSSet.
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oldTypes = NSSet setWithArray:pboard types; NSMutableSet. newTypes = NSMutableSet setWithArray:item types; newTypes minusSet:oldTypes; pboard addTypes:newTypes allObjects owner:nil; for (NSString. type in newTypes) This function adds only the types in item that the pasteboard does not already contain. However I would think you would want to add all the representations of item to the pasteboard? Theoretically, if the pasteboard already contains plain text at the moment the user copies from Chrome, AddDataToPasteboard will see that plain text and skip copying plain text from Chrome.
Outlook for Office 365 for Mac Outlook 2016 for Mac Outlook 2019 for Mac Updated: March 2018 This article explains how to do some of the more popular formatting tasks, such as changing the font, embedding a link, showing or hiding paragraph marks, and pasting text and images into your email message. Change the font The default font is Calibri (Body) 11, but you can change this. Highlight the text where you want to change the font.
Select the font and font size from the drop-down lists. Add some color by selecting the Font Color button and choosing a color. For information on changing font sizes, see. Embed a link Hyperlinked text is underlined and displayed in a blue font, but you can edit the font, size, color, and style. Highlight the word or words that you want to turn into a link. Click Link. Enter the URL that you want to use, and then click OK.
The text you selected earlier becomes a hyperlink that the recipient selects to go directly to the web page. To edit the URL, right-click or Ctrl+click the hyperlinked text, and select Hyperlink Edit Hyperlink. To edit the format of the hyperlink, select the hyperlinked text and click any of these buttons to apply formatting. Paste text and images into your message. Select and copy the content you want to add to your message.
Go to your email message, and select Edit Paste. At the bottom of the pasted text you'll see a paste control icon.
Click it to reveal your paste options. Keep Source Formatting keeps all of the original formatting and images. Match Destination Formatting changes the font to match what you're using in your message. Images are unchanged. Tip: If the font size increases when you paste text into your message, use this paste option to solve the problem. Keep Text Only removes all of the formatting and images and leave only the text. Select the desired choice.
Add a list You select your bullet or number format by using the list buttons on the ribbon. You can also promote or demote sections of the list with the indent buttons to create a nested list. Place your cursor where you want a bulleted list. On the Message tab, click the arrow next to Bullets or Numbering. Choose a bullet or number style and start typing.
Here's an example of the bullet styles available. Press Enter every time you want a new bullet, or press Enter twice to end the bulleted list. Tip: When you start a paragraph with an asterisk and a space (. ) or with number 1 and a period ( 1.), Outlook displays the AutoCorrect Options button and begins building a bulleted or numbered list.
If you don't want a bulleted or numbered list, click the AutoCorrect Options button, and then click Stop Automatically Creating Bulleted Lists or Stop Automatically Creating Numbered Lists. Insert a table You can insert a table by specifying the number of rows and columns. You can also insert larger tables or tables with custom width behaviors. Here's the most basic way to insert a table:. Place your cursor where you want the table. On the Message tab, click Table and select the number of rows and columns for your table. Click and the table appears in the message.
For larger tables or for more control over the columns, use the Insert Table command instead:. On the Message tab, click Table, and then click Insert Table. Under Table Size, select the number of columns and rows. In AutoFit Behavior, you have three options for setting how wide your columns are:. Initial column width: You can let Outlook automatically set the column width with Auto, or you can set a specific width for all of your columns.
AutoFit to contents: This will create very narrow columns that will expand as you add content. AutoFit to window: This automatically changes the width of the entire table to fit the size of your document. If you want each table you create to look like the table you’re creating, check Set as default for new tables. When you click in the table, the Table Design and Layout tabs appear. On the Table Design tab, choose different colors, table styles, add or remove borders from the table. On the Layout tab, you can,. Copy formatting from one location and apply it to another You can quickly apply the same formatting, such as color, font style and size, and border style, to multiple pieces of text or graphics, from one location to another.
Select the text or graphic that has the formatting that you want to copy. On the Message tab, click Format Painter.
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