How do I display the Favorites Pane within the Navigation Pane??

G

Guest

I recently had my pc swapped out and the Favorites Pane is not displaying
within my Navigation Pane. I have been all over the place trying to get it
displayed and it is driving me nuts!!!!

Does anyone know the Chinese secret recipe to displaying the Favorites Pane
within the Navigation pain in Outlook 2003????

ANY assistance is appreciated!
 
S

Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]

You mean the Favorite Folders list under All Mail Folders. You need to click the Mail button at the bottom of the navigation pane.

--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003

and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
 
R

Roady [MVP]

At the right bottom corner of the Navigation Pane you see a >> shaped
button. Press it and choose Navigation Pane Options... Here you can select
what buttons to display in the Navigation Pane.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
I recently had my pc swapped out and the Favorites Pane is not displaying
within my Navigation Pane. I have been all over the place trying to get it
displayed and it is driving me nuts!!!!

Does anyone know the Chinese secret recipe to displaying the Favorites Pane
within the Navigation pain in Outlook 2003????

ANY assistance is appreciated!
 
R

Roady [MVP]

Oops, that was about the Shortcuts Navigation. Sue is correct here :)

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
message At the right bottom corner of the Navigation Pane you see a >> shaped
button. Press it and choose Navigation Pane Options... Here you can select
what buttons to display in the Navigation Pane.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
I recently had my pc swapped out and the Favorites Pane is not displaying
within my Navigation Pane. I have been all over the place trying to get it
displayed and it is driving me nuts!!!!

Does anyone know the Chinese secret recipe to displaying the Favorites Pane
within the Navigation pain in Outlook 2003????

ANY assistance is appreciated!
 
G

Guest

Well, unfortunately - I tried that first since it was the simplest and most
obvious answer. The Navigation Pane is split (normally) into 2 panes, the
Favorites Pane (at top) and, for me, the Folder List at bottom.

However, at this time, the only thing I see in my Navigation Pane is
whatever button I choose to display (shortcuts, calendar, folder list) and I
have no Favorite Pane (as it is referred to in MS Outlook Help) at the top. I
have no split in my Navigation Pane at all.

Does that assist in clarifying my need?

Thanks!
 
S

Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]

The only button that will display the Favorite Folders area at the top of the navigation pane is the Mail button. Tell us exactly what you see in the navigation pane after you click the Mail button. A link to a screen shot would be even better.

--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003

and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
 
G

Guest

Sue,

Since the new pc I received was just a dump image from Ghost, I uninstalled
MS Office 2003 entirely, rebooted it and re-installed. Everything seems to be
fine and the panel is displaying properly now by default. I don't have a clue
what the issue was, nothing I did, nothing I could find changed it. It even
says in help that the Favorites pane can't be removed (which is when I
decided to reinstall). It was acting weird in other ways too. I think it may
have been a bad image.

I do thank you for your time and effort and will be back if I have other
questions. This forum is awesome.

Anyone point me in the direction of learning Visio? :)
 
R

Roady [MVP]

Good to hear you've got it working!

As for Visio you might want to start here;
http://office.microsoft.com/visio

At the bottom there are Learn Visio links.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
Sue,

Since the new pc I received was just a dump image from Ghost, I uninstalled
MS Office 2003 entirely, rebooted it and re-installed. Everything seems to
be
fine and the panel is displaying properly now by default. I don't have a
clue
what the issue was, nothing I did, nothing I could find changed it. It even
says in help that the Favorites pane can't be removed (which is when I
decided to reinstall). It was acting weird in other ways too. I think it may
have been a bad image.

I do thank you for your time and effort and will be back if I have other
questions. This forum is awesome.

Anyone point me in the direction of learning Visio? :)
 
G

Guest

Thanks Roady!!

Roady said:
Good to hear you've got it working!

As for Visio you might want to start here;
http://office.microsoft.com/visio

At the bottom there are Learn Visio links.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
Sue,

Since the new pc I received was just a dump image from Ghost, I uninstalled
MS Office 2003 entirely, rebooted it and re-installed. Everything seems to
be
fine and the panel is displaying properly now by default. I don't have a
clue
what the issue was, nothing I did, nothing I could find changed it. It even
says in help that the Favorites pane can't be removed (which is when I
decided to reinstall). It was acting weird in other ways too. I think it may
have been a bad image.

I do thank you for your time and effort and will be back if I have other
questions. This forum is awesome.

Anyone point me in the direction of learning Visio? :)

Sue Mosher said:
The only button that will display the Favorite Folders area at the top of
the navigation pane is the Mail button. Tell us exactly what you see in
the navigation pane after you click the Mail button. A link to a screen
shot would be even better.

--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003

and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
 
R

Roady [MVP]

You're welcome! :)

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
Thanks Roady!!

Roady said:
Good to hear you've got it working!

As for Visio you might want to start here;
http://office.microsoft.com/visio

At the bottom there are Learn Visio links.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-FREE tool; QuickMail. Create new Outlook items anywhere from within
Windows
-Properly back-up and restore your Outlook data

-----
Sue,

Since the new pc I received was just a dump image from Ghost, I
uninstalled
MS Office 2003 entirely, rebooted it and re-installed. Everything seems to
be
fine and the panel is displaying properly now by default. I don't have a
clue
what the issue was, nothing I did, nothing I could find changed it. It
even
says in help that the Favorites pane can't be removed (which is when I
decided to reinstall). It was acting weird in other ways too. I think it
may
have been a bad image.

I do thank you for your time and effort and will be back if I have other
questions. This forum is awesome.

Anyone point me in the direction of learning Visio? :)

Sue Mosher said:
The only button that will display the Favorite Folders area at the top
of
the navigation pane is the Mail button. Tell us exactly what you see in
the navigation pane after you click the Mail button. A link to a screen
shot would be even better.

--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003

and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
 

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