Can I reply with attachment?

G

Guest

Thanks anyone that might be able to help:

I have Office 2003, with XP Pro.

Presently, if I reply, or forward an email that I received with an
attachment, the attcahment doesn't stay with the message. Is there a setting
that I can change that will allow me to reply or forward and keep the
original attachments attached?

I have received messages from others (either replies or forwards) that have
the original attcahment still with the message, so there must be some way to
do it.

Thanks for any help you can offer.
 
B

Brian Tillman

Jim said:
Presently, if I reply, or forward an email that I received with an
attachment, the attcahment doesn't stay with the message. Is there a
setting that I can change that will allow me to reply or forward and
keep the original attachments attached?

Replies won't have the attachment. Forwards will.
I have received messages from others (either replies or forwards)
that have the original attcahment still with the message, so there
must be some way to do it.

Sure. Reattach the attachment by dragging it from the original message to
the reply. However, the person or people to whom you are replying already
have the attachment. Why would you want to send it again?
 
G

Guest

Brian:

Thanks for the reply.

You're correct (my error) that forwards do maintain the attachment.

However, in the case of a reply, the reason I want to keep the attachment
with the reply, is because I only have to save the most recent email in the
string. If an original email (with an attachment) generates numerous replies
back and forth, I only have to save the most recent message, and I have all
the previous messages (listed by string in the message body) with the
original attachment in one file.

I understand you're message to drag the attachment from the original message
to the reply, I was just hoping that there was a setting in Outlook that
would tell Outlook to automatically keep the attachment with the reply. Am I
correct then that this option doesn't exist?

Thanks again.
 
B

Brian Tillman

Jim said:
I understand you're message to drag the attachment from the original
message to the reply, I was just hoping that there was a setting in
Outlook that would tell Outlook to automatically keep the attachment
with the reply. Am I correct then that this option doesn't exist?

That is correct. The option doesn't exist.
 
G

Guest

It really isn't a matter of the sender having the original file. Often I
receive a file that was sent to several users for review and comment. I edit
the file and want to "reply to all" so all see the commented file. That is
why an attach on reply option would be good. Using "forward" makes me
reselect addresses. I will try the drag and drop option. A good work around
at least. Thanks
 
B

Brian Tillman

Bill said:
It really isn't a matter of the sender having the original file.
Often I receive a file that was sent to several users for review and
comment. I edit the file and want to "reply to all" so all see the
commented file.

Then you should be saving the original to disk, making your changes there,
and reattaching when you reply. The changes you make without first saving
to disk are easily lost and may, in fact, not be in the attachment in the
message.
 
G

Guest

I would like to think that Microsoft Outlook is more stable than you propose.
I do this all the time forwarding messages back to the sender without any
problems of lost information, but I am speaking of comments and minor
revisions here. Not a major rewrite of the original attachment. Anything
major is of course edited offline. Thanks for the advice.
 
B

Brian Tillman

Bill said:
I would like to think that Microsoft Outlook is more stable than you
propose.

Try reading this newsgroup for a while. It may change your opinion.
I do this all the time forwarding messages back to the
sender without any problems of lost information, but I am speaking of
comments and minor revisions here. Not a major rewrite of the
original attachment. Anything major is of course edited offline.

Do what you want.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top