I'm afraid I do not understand the reference to Karl Timmermans.
I mentioned the version number in the original post of this thread. I am
using Outlook 2002 (10.6515.6714) SP3.
The reason I exported to Access is that it allows me to maintain one table
which I can use for multiple purposes, e.g. labels, form letters,
envelopes, etc. It also makes it easier to save queries to be used as
source input for different mailings.
I did not realize that Nickname was a non-standard field. In a form
letter, I use both the full name and the nickname. The envelope and the
address in the letter use the full name, e.g. "Mr. Theodore G. Smith".
The salutation is informal and "Dear Ted" is the preferred form. Is that
really that esoteric?
As a "work around" I populated the "Spouse" field with nicknames and am
using the Access table to perform the desired tasks.
IMHO, "Spouse" appears to be a much more "non-standard" term in a Contacts
database than Nickname.
Russ Valentine said:
You never mentioned your versions. In the current version, the Nickname
field appears only in the Database fields, not the Address fields. It
will merge correctly. I would never expect exporting to Access to work
for a mail merge with a non-standard field like Nickname. That is
expecting far more from Office integration than it can deliver. Karl
Timmermans can probably tell you how to export to Access in a way to make
this work, but mere mortals cannot.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
Wilfred said:
It looks like I celebrated my discovery prematurely.
Although the "Address Fields" list displays "Nickname", it does not map
to a nickname field in the Access table.
I've managed to get my merge done using Outlook/Tools/Mail Merge, but
using Outlook as the source document doesn't give me the flexibility
that using the Access table does. Although Outlook provides the ability
to save the source list for future use, it does not save it in a table
that can be easily updated for future use.
Actually, I did find the "nickname" field in the "Address Fields" list.
Here's an example of the lack of consistent usability features among
the Office applications suite:
1. When I use Outlook/Tools/Mail Merge to create the source data for a
form letter, the "nickname" is displayed in both lists - Address fields
and Database fields.
2. When I export the Contacts file to an Access table and use that
table as the source for a mail merge, it only appears in the "Address
fields" list BUT the radio button in the dialog box with the two lists
defaults to Database fields.
It was not intuitive for me to look for it in the Address list.
Thank you for the help.