Outlook viewing attachments

K

kenh

When I receive an email that has embeded pics, I can see the pics and text
together as they should be, when going directly to att.net. Also, same on
iphone.
On Outlook, however, the pics show up as attachments and each must be opened
separately. I am sure there is a setting to make them show in the main body
of the message. Can you help me?
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]

When I receive an email that has embeded pics, I can see the pics and text
together as they should be, when going directly to att.net. Also, same on
iphone.
On Outlook, however, the pics show up as attachments and each must be opened
separately. I am sure there is a setting to make them show in the main body
of the message. Can you help me?

If you're "sure" there's a setting, you've deceived yourself. How pictures
appear in a message in Outlook is determined by how the sender included them
in the message. Web browsers can't "do" attachments and so show the pictures.
It's clear from Outlook's behavior, however, that your sender did not embed
the images, but attached them. Outlook will always show attachments as
attachments.
 
V

VanguardLH

kenh said:
When I receive an email that has embeded pics, I can see the pics and text
together as they should be, when going directly to att.net. Also, same on
iphone.
On Outlook, however, the pics show up as attachments and each must be opened
separately. I am sure there is a setting to make them show in the main body
of the message. Can you help me?

Look in the raw source for the e-mail (but don't use Outlook since you never
get to see the raw source of an e-mail). Check the MIME part in the body of
the e-mail in which the attachment is encoded. Is it set to:

disposition=inline

or

disposition=attach

If the disposition is set to "attach" then the recipient's e-mail client is
supposed to show it separate of the e-mail body, like a paper clip icon or a
list of attachments. When disposition is "inline", the e-mail client is
supposed to show the *content* of the MIME part within the body of the
e-mail.

If it is an HTML e-mail and the "attachment" of which you speak is, say, an
image then it will show up in the body of the e-mail if an <IMG> tag was
used to place that content within the body of the document.
 

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