Outlook Calendar Add-In

  • Thread starter Thread starter Victor Delta
  • Start date Start date
V

Victor Delta

I frequently want to diarise regular events or meetings which occur on, say,
the third Tuesday of every month, or working day 10 of every month.

Does anyone please know if there is an Add-In (or some other method) for
achieving this with Outlook XP?

With many thanks,

V
 
Calendars have been available in MS Office Outlook since forever.

With your Calendar open, open an appointment, then click on Recurrence.
Enter the frequency that you wish. Lots of options.
 
Victor Delta said:
I frequently want to diarise regular events or meetings which occur on,
say, the third Tuesday of every month, or working day 10 of every
month.

Does anyone please know if there is an Add-In (or some other method)
for achieving this with Outlook XP?


Maybe you could define your special term "diarise". Maybe you spelled
it phonetically but only you would know how it sounds for whatever word
you meant to use but misspelled.
 
Vanguard said:
Maybe you could define your special term "diarise". Maybe you spelled it
phonetically but only you would know how it sounds for whatever word you
meant to use but misspelled.

My dictionary defines it as "To create an entry in one's diary" and I would
have thought it was obvious from the context.
 
Vanguard said:
Maybe you could define your special term "diarise".

It could be the act of having diarrhea, but I suspect it's based on the word
"diary" and I would guess has to do with summarizing something in the
calendar.
 
...


My dictionary defines it as "To create an entry in one's diary" and I
would have thought it was obvious from the context.

Just because you choose to add a misspelled word to the user-added words
list in your dictionary doesn't make it a defined term (except to you).

http://www.google.com/search?q=define:diarise
no matches

http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=diarise
no matches

Diarise is not defined, but diarize is. Once the correct word was
determined, a Google search works, like
http://www.google.com/search?q=+diary++Outlook which found the
following articles or providing navigation paths to them:

http://www.outlook-tips.net/archives/2004/20040316.htm
http://www.oracle.com/technology/products/ocal/index.html
http://www.csoftlab.com/Diary.html
and many others.
 
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