Quote:
Originally Posted by gmayor
When you create the certificate using the process at the link I posted earlier - http://www.gmayor.com/create_and_emp...gital_cert.htm you can add it to the Outlook Project from the Outlook VBA editor > Tools > Digital Signature. You will then be able to run the macros in the project.
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Hi gmayor,
Thanks for the info. I did look in Tools before and totally missed the Digital Sig option! I'll let you know how things work out.
But a curiosity question if you don't mind. Is it correct that now the original macro won't work because its not signed even though it worked when I first entered it. If it needs to be signed to work then why did it work at all when I first entered it? Also does it then mean that if a OL user writes a simple macro using a few lines of code then he has to go through the confusing process to create a signed certificate and assign the macro code to it to get it to run. I realize this is to prevent bad macros from running but it seems to put a large burden on a casual user who just wants to automate a procedure that he may use often.
Thanks again,
Gerry