How do I end a recurring appointment without loosing prior edits?

J

JSenatro

I am using Outlook 2007. I have a recurring appointment set up with no end
date. I have edited single occurances of this appointment in the past. I
would like to end the occurance now, but when I do, I get a warning that I
will loose any exceptions to the series. Is there anything I can do to save
the exceptions, but remove the recurrance from this date forward?
 
B

Brian Tillman

JSenatro said:
I am using Outlook 2007. I have a recurring appointment set up with
no end date. I have edited single occurances of this appointment in
the past. I would like to end the occurance now, but when I do, I get
a warning that I will loose any exceptions to the series. Is there
anything I can do to save the exceptions, but remove the recurrance
from this date forward?

A recurring event is only a single entry in the calendar, with the
recurrences calculated on the fly and the exceptions kept as a table of some
kind within the base item. If you wish to put an end date on a recurring
appointment and retain the exceptions, you'll have to export the appointment
to a CSV file to convert it to individual entries, delete the original item,
and reimport the list of events generated when you exported.
 
B

Brian Tillman

JSenatro said:
Thanks. How do I export to a CSV file, then reimport the list of
events?

This is how I'd do it: first, I'd create a new calendar folder
(File>New>Folder, with "Calendar Items" in the "folder contains" drop-down),
then display my main Calendar folder in the By Category view (View>Current
View>By Category), right-click the appointment, and drag it to the new
calendar folder, choosing Copy when I release the mouse button. Then I'd
click File>Import and Export>Export to a file, choosing "Comma serparated
values" as the output format. When Outlook asks for the folder, select the
new calendar folder. Outlook will tell you it can't export a recurring
event and ask you to specify a range. Give the starting date of the event,
and the ending date after which the event should cease. Finish the wizard.
The CSV file you created will contain the list of all the individual events
generated from the original event, including the exceptions.

After the export is finished, delete the event from the main Calendar and
then click File>Import>Import from another program or file. Select "Comma
separated values", browse to the file you created before, select it, and
finish the wizard, specifying your main Calendar as the destination. The
events will be added to your calendar as individual items than include all
the exceptions.
 
J

JSenatro

Worked perfect. Thanks.

Brian Tillman said:
This is how I'd do it: first, I'd create a new calendar folder
(File>New>Folder, with "Calendar Items" in the "folder contains" drop-down),
then display my main Calendar folder in the By Category view (View>Current
View>By Category), right-click the appointment, and drag it to the new
calendar folder, choosing Copy when I release the mouse button. Then I'd
click File>Import and Export>Export to a file, choosing "Comma serparated
values" as the output format. When Outlook asks for the folder, select the
new calendar folder. Outlook will tell you it can't export a recurring
event and ask you to specify a range. Give the starting date of the event,
and the ending date after which the event should cease. Finish the wizard.
The CSV file you created will contain the list of all the individual events
generated from the original event, including the exceptions.

After the export is finished, delete the event from the main Calendar and
then click File>Import>Import from another program or file. Select "Comma
separated values", browse to the file you created before, select it, and
finish the wizard, specifying your main Calendar as the destination. The
events will be added to your calendar as individual items than include all
the exceptions.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top