Then create a document and save it as .pdf and mail that as an attachment.
--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]
Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.
How to ask a question:
http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375
After furious head scratching, Prabodh Pavaskar asked:
| Thanks for your reply.
|
| I was asking this all, only to know if i use HTML format for some
| important mails
| then, is it possible that the receiver can modify that mail and
| forward it to some one else Because i always send some mails which
| requires data security, so that no one can able to make changes in it.
|
| Please advice.
|
||| Can anyone tell me what is difference between HTML mails and plain
||| text mails
||| 1) does it affects size of the mail
||
|| Well, yes, of course. Consider the following:
||
|| This is a test.
||
|| That's 15 characters in plain text. Add in HTML formatting (the
|| same HTML that makes up a web page) and you end up with a larger
|| message.
||
||| 2) Does the display quality of HTML is better than plain text.
||
|| Eh? 'display quality'? The only difference is that HTML has
|| formatting, plain text is plain. (well, and that html formatted
|| messages will be larger.)
||
||| 3) which the best format of these two
||
|| That's like asking 'What's better, an apple or an orange?' It's all
|| personal preference.
||
||| 4) if i use HTML format then, if anyone who receives my mails find
||| any technical difficulties.
||
|| If they happen to use a mail client that doesn't render HTML
|| formatted messages properly, they may not be able to easily read the
|| message.
||
|| --
|| -f.h.