If you have hyperlinks in your table, edit the link texts, so they make sense and don't break mid-sentence. Make sure the tables render properly on all devices, including phones and tablets. If you have to use tables, use the following guidelines to make sure your table is as accessible as possible: This makes the font very small, which forces Magnifier users to scroll horizontally especially on mobile devices. In general, avoid tables if possible and present the data another way, like paragraphs with headings and banners. Tables with fixed width might prove difficult to read for people who use Magnifier, because such tables force the content to a specific size. For more info, go to Improve accessibility with the Accessibility Checker. To manually launch the Accessibility Checker, select Review > Check Accessibility. The Accessibility pane opens, and you can now review and fix accessibility issues. Show me accessibility warnings only when I open the accessibility checker Any other issues will still appear in the Accessibility pane, but they won't cause the MailTip to appear.Īt least one recipient is outside my organization If you're composing in Black Theme with dark mode enabled, which is the default for this theme, the Accessibility Checker runs but shows notifications only when text contrast is insufficient. Using a dark background to compose a message. Show me accessibility warnings while I workĪt least one recipient prefers accessible content If any accessibility issues are detected, a MailTip appears to guide you to review suggestions and fix the issue. The default option is to show accessibility notifications in certain scenarios. Select File > Options > Accessibility and select if you want to see accessibility notifications through a MailTip while you work, in certain scenarios, or only when you manually launch the Accessibility Checker. To clarify this a bit, since I really have no idea what's going on.In Outlook, you can define how the accessibility notifications and Accessibility Checker work. Nevertheless, there is now (perhaps there was before and I missed it?) an arrow in the lower right of the Tags group in the Message tab (message window) that does just what the old Outlook 2007 used to do! Pretty convoluted but effective. This even though Tools (with Field Chooser as one of its items) **is** listed as one of the groups under the Developer tab in Customize Ribbon for the message window. On the other hand, a new Developer tab in the Message tab of the message itself has three groupsīut still no Tools group, just Code, Add-Ins, and Form. SOLUTION, thanks to Brian Tillman, I think:īrian Tillman suggested, "Use the Field Chooser to add the account field to the header line." With the help of Outlook Help>Field Chooser, I understood this to mean go the File>Options>Customize Ribbon and check the "Developer" entry in the Main Tabs list.Īfter doing this I do indeed see a new Developer tab in the main Outlook window, but when I click it it's empty - no Tools group in which to select Field Chooser. There was no such arrow in my Tags group, but see below.
![find email headers in outlook 2013 find email headers in outlook 2013](https://www.hostens.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/headers1.png)
The main Outlook window (I think it means, since there is no Home tab in the message window) click the Home tab and look in the Tags group for a similar arrow. Another entry in Help suggests opening the message, then in A search of Outlook Help suggests using Message>Move Group>Actions>Other Actions>Message Header, but this doesn't provide the needed information. I could find no such feature in Outlook 2013. The entire message header at Message>Options Group>click arrow in lower-right corner. Outlook 2007 (and apparently 2010) used to show I was having trouble determining to which of my various POP3 accounts a given message was sent - they are all just listed under my name, since I have three distinct e-mail addresses in my Contacts listing.