

This could be quite simple, such as matching the sender to an exact address, but you have a lot of options to choose from. The Advanced tab allows you to select any field from anywhere in Outlook, and select a condition that you want to match. Switch over to the “Advanced” tab, and you can create complex conditions.

You can turn default rules off though, by unchecking them in the “Rules for this view” list. You can’t delete default rules, or move the order around, or change the conditions for the rule. With the default rules, you can only change the font. If a message meets the conditions of both rules, the font will be changed to green because that rule is higher up on the list-the rule which sets the font to red is ignored. How does this work in practice? Let’s say you have two rules, one at the top of the list that changes the font to green, and one lower down in the list that changes the font to red. Rules higher up on the list take precedence over rules lower down. Outlook applies rules in order from the top of the list. When that rule is activated, Outlook uses the bold, blue, 11-point Segoe UI font to display it. In the default rules, for example, the “Unread Messages” rule is activated when a message is marked as unread. The “rules” are the conditions that a message has to meet for Outlook to apply the formatting. For example, you can see that “Unread messages” are displayed in bold, blue Segoe UI font with a size of 11 points. The items displayed in the “Rules for this view” list are the default rules that come with an un-customized folder view. Strange for a non MS product to produce the "mso" tags, but it clearly does when using Firefox and Chrome browsers (but not in Safari).This brings you to the Conditional Formatting window that you’ll be using to set up different rules for how messages are formatted.

#OUTLOOK CONDITIONAL FORMATTING IS NOT WORKING CODE#
We eventually found the source of the code - Matlab Online. Meanwhile Outlook Webmail () generated html like this: 1 and it just keeps going with 600+ lines of Word generated code. We are trying to figure out what actually generated the above example which was submitted by a student and it looks like they copied from MS Word or an email.īy copying text into Drupal I've found both MS Word and Outlook programs produce this code: 1 2 I tried copying from MS Word and Outlook programs and it does make use of the conditional formatting, however it looks different to the conditional formatting I gave earlier.

Q: Does MS Word or OneNote also generate conditional html as above? Or is it unique to MS Outlook? Looking up info re "mso" I find that it means "MS Office", however all the examples on the web refer to Outlook being the target for this conditional html code. It isn't clear to me if code such as the following is unique to Outlook only:
