Search OutlookPower's 9,610 Outlook and all-things-email article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
THIS WEEK'S POWERTIP
Finding Contacts by the letter
By Diane Poremsky

The Find a Contact command on the Standard toolbar is available from all Outlook folders. Most people who use this command just type in part of the first or last name and pick the contact they want out of the Choose a Contact list that is returned. However, when you have a large number of contacts, you might get hundreds of records returned. You can fine tune the search and limit the number of records returned as long as you know some of the letters in the contact's first or last name. When it's a foreign name with a spelling you are unsure of, as long as you know some of the letters in the first and last names, you can find the contact easily.

When you know part of the contact's name but aren't sure of the spelling, search using initials or letters contained in their name. For example, when you enter "j p" or "j por", you will return the contacts for Jessie Poremsky, Jim Porter, and Reja Aportee.

When you use a space in the search, Outlook searches differently depending on where the first letter is found. Outlook uses pattern matching, and if it finds the first letter at the beginning of the word, it looks for the second letter at the beginning of the next word, and so on.

If the first letter is found in the middle of the first word, Outlook looks in the middle of the second word. Since j is in the middle of Reja, Outlook looks in the middle of Aportee for a match with por. You won't find Mark J LaPorte using "j por" as the search string, while AJ LaPorte and Jim Porter are found.

This search format fails when a contact is entered in a format such as "Richard & Jessica Porter", with an ampersand or even "and" separating the husband and wife names. Jessica Porter is not seen when Outlook searches for "j por". When you remove the ampersand, so that the contact name reads "Richard Jessica Porter", searching for "j por" works.

When you need to look up all the Jeff's in your contacts, how do you do it? Some are entered as Jeff, some as Jeffery, and you know one spells his name Geoff. You could search for each one, one at a time. Or you could just type "ff" in the Find a Contact field. You'll also find all you contacts with the last name Jefferson with this search.

With the ampersand exception aside, the logic Outlook uses for these searches is pretty neat, and it's not limited to the Find a Contact command. Outlook uses similar logic when you search using the Find pane.

Diane Poremsky is the president of CDOLive LLC and a Microsoft Outlook MVP. She's coauthor of Word 2002: The Complete Reference (Osborne, 2001) and Beginning Visual Basic 6 Application Development (for Wrox Press). For questions or suggestions for future columns, write her at outlook@cdolive.com.


Other articles you might like
Home > Using Outlook > Contacts & Address Book (27 articles)
   Printing notes with contacts in Outlook 2007
   A very crude way to print Outlook contact pictures
   How to separate email accounts and still manage them
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent OutlookPower Articles
Hands on debugging a broken Outlook forwarding rule
The strange case of Outlook losing notes and requiring passwords
Why I'm choosing to stick with Outlook 2007
Three ways to avoid email distraction and take back control of your time
Twenty ways to use email to commit career suicide
The two most motivational words in the English language
Diagnosing corrupted email headers
OutlookPower News Center
New book says we relate to our computers like humans
Microsoft Previews More of Office 2011
Microsoft gets legal might to target spamming botnets
Microsoft suspends 'Fort Gay' gamer
Tired of the IT rat race? Work overseas!
Microsoft Claims Silverlight Beats HTML5
It's not a bug, it's a feature -- and you'll pay either way
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: Introducing the Jones family and their full-family backup challenges
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Lotus must open source Notes and Domino
-- Advertisement --

Write for OutlookPower today!
Share your experience and expertise with other Outlook and Exchange users, administrators, and developers. OutlookPower Magazine has grown nicely and now has new opportunities for contributing authors and editors.

Write about something you're an expert on and get your name in lights.

For Writers' Guidelines and to discuss topics, contact Staff Editor Steve Niles. This is your opportunity to shine in front of your peers, your clients, and other readers.

Click for more info!

-- Advertisement --

Personalized Emails Are Opened More
Create and send personalized, individually addressed copies of the same email to as many people as you want...using our easy Wizard Interface inside Outlook.

EmailMerge will help you make more sales. Send Personalized Business Emails, Holiday Greeting and Invites. EmailMerge will help you reach your customers, family, and friends in more personal and effective way. Supports Outlooks Contacts, Excel and Access files, delayed batch sending, multiple accounts and more within its easy to use Wizard interface.

Tap here to download a fully-functional 30-day trial.

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
The Power Magazine for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange Users at OutlookPower.com
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Outlook is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
Editor's Login