Microsoft KB Archive/193457

= OL98: Using Address Books in an Outlook Solution =

Article ID: 193457

Article Last Modified on 11/23/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Outlook 98 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q193457



SUMMARY
This article provides an overview of data that you have access to in address books. It also discusses how you can programmatically display an address book dialog box.



Accessing Address Book Data
Using the Microsoft Outlook 98 object model, you can access information that is stored in various address books. For example, you can retrieve information about entries in the Global Address Book or a user's Personal Address Book. To see the type of information you have access to, consult the AddressEntries Object topic in the Microsoft Outlook Visual Basic Help file (Vbaoutl.hlp). Click the Properties on that page to see the list of properties available for an entry in an address book.

If you want to access additional entries that are typically available for a recipient (such as Office, Title or Phone) you can use the Collaboration Data Objects (CDO) object model.

For more information about accessing these properties using CDO, please see the following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

179083 HOWTO: Read Address Book Properties in Visual Basic

178787 HOWTO: Work with Distribution Lists Using CDO from VB

Displaying an Address Book Dialog Box
The Outlook 98 object model does not support displaying a dialog for a user to select recipients from an address book. To implement an address book dialog in your solution, use the appropriate method.

Method 1
The preferred method of displaying an address book dialog is to use the AddressBook method in the CDO object model. Typically, you would add a Command Button control to the Outlook form and in the Click event for the button you would automate the CDO object model from Visual Basic Scripting Edition (VBScript).

An advantage of using CDO to display the Address Book is that you can customize the appearance of the dialog box to suit your needs.

For more information about using CDO to display the Address Book dialog box, consult the CDO documentation at the following Microsoft World Wide Web site:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/

The AddressBook method documentation is located at the following Microsoft World Wide Web site:

http://premium.microsoft.com/msdn/library/psdk/cdo/oleobjis_8dri.htm

Method 2
Use a command button control on an Outlook form that is bound to a recipient field (such as the "To" field). If a command button is bound to a recipient field, when the user clicks the button, Outlook displays the address book dialog box and the recipient that the user selects is added the field.

NOTE: Although Outlook items other than a mail message do not have recipients fields, these fields are functional on non-mail forms even though they are not listed in the set of fields available for that particular item. You cannot directly access these fields from VBScript, because the Outlook object model does not consider these to be valid properties of items that are not MailItems. However, as the steps that follow illustrate, you can "filter" the data through another valid field to access the user's selection from VBScript.

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http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;EN-US;CNTACTMS

The following steps illustrate how to set up a command button on an Outlook Contact form that displays the address book dialog box. This approach works on form types other than a contact form.  Open a new Contact form. On the Tools menu, click Forms, and then click Design This Form. Click the (P.2) page of the form. Set the Field Chooser to display All Mail Fields and then drag the To field onto the (P.2) page of the form. Right-click To... and click Properties. Change the name to cmdSelectManager, change the caption to Select Manager... , and click OK. Resize the controls on the P.2 page as needed. On the Field Chooser, click New... and create a user-defined text field called MyTo. Drag the MyTo field onto the P.2 page of the form. Right-click the text box for the MyTo field and then click Properties. On the Value page of the Properties dialog box, click to select the Set the initial value of this field to check box and type the following formula into the text box: [To], select the option to Calculate this formula automatically, and then click OK.</li> Using the Control Toolbox, drag a command button onto the form. This is typically named CommandButton1.</li>  On the Form menu, click View Code. Type the following VBScript code and then close the Script Editor. Make sure the name of the command button in code matches the name of the command button added in Step 8. Sub CommandButton1_Click MsgBox Item.UserProperties.Find("MyTo") End Sub </li></ol>

To test the form, click the Form menu and then click Run This Form. Click the P.2 page of the form and click Select Manager. When the dialog box appears, click to select a name, and click To-> to add the name to the list of recipients. Click OK. The selected name appears in the text box on the form, which is also bound to the To field. The selected name now appears in the MyTo field, because that field is set to be based automatically on the To field. Click the CommandButton1 control to see the selected manager displayed in VBScript.

NOTE: It is not possible to change any of the labels or strings in this Address Book dialog box, as you can with the dialog box created using CDO.

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