How do I enable tables in Outlook 2010?
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Today we’re going to have a closer look at Outlook table templates. I’ll show you how to create them, merge and color cells and format your tables to use them in email templates for your correspondence. Previous to showing you how to add tables to your emails, I’d like to devote a few lines to a small introduction of our app for Outlook called Shared Email Templates. We designed this tool to make your routine correspondence not only quicker, but also more efficient. With Shared Email Templates you’ll be able to create a nice looking reply with formatting, hyperlinks, images and tables in a few clicks. I’d love to encourage you to look through our Docs and blog posts to discover the add-in’s countless abilities and make sure it worth checking :) BTW, you may always install Shared Email Templates from Microsoft Store and give it a try for free ;) Create a table in Outlook email templatesI’d like to start from the very beginning and show you how to create a new table in a template:
You just need to specify the number of rows and columns for your future table and it’ll be added to your template. Alternatively, you may paste a ready-made table in your template. However, it’ll require a small modification. The thing is your table will be pasted borderless so you’ll need to go to Table properties and set
Border width to 1 in order to make the borders visible. Tip. In case you need to add new rows/columns or, on the contrary, remove some, just place the cursor in any cell and choose the necessary option from the dropdown pane: If you no longer need this table, just right-click on it and choose Delete table: How to format a table in a templateTables are not always just black-bordered rows and columns so if you need to highlight some key points, you may brighten your table a little :) Right-click in any cell and choose the Table properties option from the dropdown list. There will be two fields for you to modify:
Let’s format some sample table and see how it works. For example, I have a template with the list of my company’s customers that I’d like to improve a little. First off, I’d color it all. So, I right-click somewhere on this table and go
Table Properties -> Advanced. Once I choose the color and hit OK, my table gets much brighter. Looks better, doesn’t it? ;) But I’m not done yet. I’d also love to make the header row brighter and more visible. Speaking generally, I want to change the formatting of the first row only. Can I do that in Shared Email Templates? Absolutely! So, I select the
first row, right click on it and choose Row -> Row properties. There are two tabs of properties to choose from. I set the central alignment on the General tab, then go to the Advanced one, change the border style to “Double” and renew the background color to a deeper tone of blue. Here is how my table looks like after the modifications applied: If, however, you feel like a pro, you may open the template’s HTML code and
modify it the way you want. Merge and unmerge cells in an Outlook tableA table wouldn’t be a table if it wasn’t possible to combine its cells and split them back if needed. Our Shared Email Templates allows modifying an Outlook table in such manner. And I’ll tell you more, you can merge cells without losing data and unmerge them back preserving all their content. Sounds too good to be truth, right? Here are three simple steps to merge cells in Outlook:
Voila! The cells are merged, the content of the merged range is preserved, no data in the table is moved, replaced or deleted. But is it possible to merge not only columns, but also rows or, maybe, even the whole table? No problem! The drill is identical, you select the range, right-click on it and go Cell -> Merge cells. And what about splitting the cells back? Will they be unmerged correctly? Will the data be saved? Will the original rows’ arrangement be preserved? Yes, yes, and yes! Just select the merged range, right click on it and do Cell -> Split cell. Drawing a conclusionIn this tutorial I showed you how to use Outlook tables as templates. Now you know how to create, modify and fill in email template tables. I hope I managed to convince you that our Shared Email Templates will boost your productivity in Outlook and you’ll give this app a shot :) Thank you for reading! In case there are any questions left, please don’t hesitate to leave them in the Comments section. I’ll be happy to hear back from you :) Available downloadsWhy Shared Email Templates? 10 reasons for decision makers (.pdf file) You may also be interested inCan you insert table in Outlook?Do one of the following: Click the table grid to set the number of rows and columns in a new empty table. Click Insert Table for a basic table template. Click Draw Table to get a pointer that lets you draw your own table, rows, and columns and vary the sizes of the table cells.
What is the shortcut to insert a table in Outlook?While writing a message, place the cursor where you want to insert the new table. To open the Insert Table dialog box, press Alt+N, T, I. Type the number of columns you want. Press the Tab key, and then type the number of rows you want.
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