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Morning Bob.
Still no luck after multiple variations of the process.... Running out of time to complete this, so I will likely pass the import file as is to the user I intended to "send" the appt too and have him upload or import the file into his calendar... However, in the interest of finding a solution, I did some experimenting this morning. 1. I exported an appt in xls, Excel 97-2003 - and re-imported it allowing duplicate appt. Going thru the import wizard, I clicked on Map Custom Fields which will allow you to see what you are importing and the suppossed results in Outlook when the import is complete. The process, tried twice, added the appt to my calendar, but did not popluate the required or optional attendees field. I then send you an appt and repeated the process. In these attempts the process added a duplicate appt, with the "send update" button active, making me believe that Outloo recognized that an update to the existing appt was created. 2. I exported the appt as a CSV, DOS file and re-imported it (yes, I view the file in Notepad and the double quotes were present. The results were the same, the appt was created in my calendar, but without the required or optional attendees fields populated. At this point, I am all but giving up, unless you have discovered something else to try... Dave |
#2
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I did think of one more test, but it isn't one that I think will solve the problem, rather just a diagnosis. If you feel like taking the time, try creating an appointment in Outlook, exporting it to CSV, deleting the appointment in Outlook and then importing the CSV again.
What I predict (given the troubles we're having) is that the appointment you import from Outlook itself (that is, from the CSV that Outlook created) will have the same problem, ie the attendee fields won't be populated. I haven't tried that myself yet, but I probably will. If my prediction is verified, I suppose it means that Outlook, whether by design or by bug, never did do that; the problem isn't in your method at all, but in Outlook itself. If by some chance that import does work, then obviously we must carefully examine the two CSVs, one from Outlook and one from Excel, to see where they differ; because the CSV has no hidden codes, it's just plain text. |
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