Want to wrap to 80 characters in Outlook, just like Gmail does to emails sent as Plain Text

9

I want to wrap to 80 characters in Outlook, just like Gmail does to emails sent as Plain Text. Apart from Gmail, this feature also works in Evolution email client in Ubuntu OS and Apple Mail in Mac OS.

enter image description here


I am unable to do this in Outlook 2010, even if I compose in Plain Text.

enter image description here

Composing email in Outlook with Plain Text selected. Other options are Rich Text and HTML.

enter image description here

Plain text is not wrapped after receiving email:

enter image description here

Shumon Saha

Posted 2012-12-11T09:40:56.523

Reputation: 709

See if there's some way of setting margins in the program -- lookup up margins in the Help. – martineau – 2012-12-11T10:50:34.507

1@martineau the only method I can see that would use margins would be to set a right margin of a fixed width (eg 3cm right margin). However that would mean the width of the email content will re-size dependent on the size of the window, so you can't guarantee 80 characters. – Andi Mohr – 2013-05-10T08:18:09.923

In that case for a plain text message your only option may be to put line-breaks into the content where you want them to occur -- like using a yypewriter. @AndiMohr's suggestion of using HTML might be a good option. I do something like that only I use a borderless table one row tall and one column wide and specify its width in pixels. – martineau – 2013-05-10T08:43:12.923

Thank you for your suggestion @martineau! Gmail automatically inserts the line-break character after every 80 characters in emails sent as plain text. I want the same functionality in Outlook 2010, i.e., the ability to automatically insert line-breaks after every 80 characters in plain text emails without manual effort. – Shumon Saha – 2013-05-10T17:11:16.237

I think that historically many email readers wrap plain text messages based on the display window's width, dynamically inserting line breaks as needed to make it fit -- even though this can make things almost unreadable if the window is very wide. However more modern ones (like Gmail and Thunderbird) let you specify a right edge in number of characters for plain text messages received. I think you may just be stuck with Outlook's limitations. – martineau – 2013-05-10T18:15:01.043

@martineau, thank you for your input once again! Gmail does not specify a right edge in the number of characters for plain text messages received - that is up to whoever sent the email to you, and obviously your display window's width. Gmail inserts (hardcoded) new-line characters for plain-text outgoing emails only. I don't think this is a limitation in Outlook, because there clearly is an option for Automatically wrap text at character as shown in one of the screenshots above! http://i.stack.imgur.com/74tfu.png

– Shumon Saha – 2013-05-10T20:07:26.577

Answers

0

The truth (and therefore the answer) is:
This is a bug which will never be fixed because it is low priority.

Automatically wrap text at character 76 doesn't work.

enter image description here

Shumon Saha

Posted 2012-12-11T09:40:56.523

Reputation: 709

2

The only way I've come up with is to create a HTML template containing a fixed width box with white/no borders. You can set the width to approximately 80 characters.

Here is a guide to creating Outlook stationery from MS Word.

When following the guide, where it says 'design your stationery', create a table with 1x1 rows and columns, and switch off the borders.

Then when you come to write your email using the template, simply write within that table cell.

NOTE: You may need administrator access to add files to the C:\Program Files\Common Files\microsoft shared\Stationery folder.

Andi Mohr

Posted 2012-12-11T09:40:56.523

Reputation: 3 750

0

Two possible correct answers as to how to set line breaks in plain text mode would be:

Manually

or

It's impossible.

Outlook works as designed when it does not wrap the e-mail while you are composing it. The setting will just affect how the message is delivered to the recipient, not how it is displayed while you write it.

More details at:

Raketenolli

Posted 2012-12-11T09:40:56.523

Reputation: 111