I wanted to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude for the incredible video tutorial you created. Your expertise, attention to detail, and clear explanations have made a significant impact on my learning journey. Your dedication to sharing knowledge and helping others is truly commendable. The effort and time you invested in creating this tutorial have not gone unnoticed, and I am incredibly grateful for the valuable insights and skills I have gained from watching it. Your ability to break down complex concepts into digestible segments and provide practical examples has greatly enhanced my understanding and proficiency in [topic or subject]. Your video tutorial has been an invaluable resource, guiding me through the learning process and inspiring me to explore further. Thank you once again for sharing your expertise and passion through your exceptional video tutorial. Your contributions have made a positive difference in my learning experience, and I am truly grateful for the knowledge and inspiration you have provided. With heartfelt appreciation
Hey, thanks for this video, but I am encountering the problem where the code runs successfully and prints the body, subject… but I don’t see any chart any reason why, thank you
Hey, this was very useful! Thanks. I wanted to ask you if there's a way to copy not one but multiple charts into an email. Also, is there a way to paste the charts into an already existing email? I have a macro that already creates the email and the body has strings and excel ranges in it, and I wanted to add some charts in between. Thanks in advance
Lucky for you, I already have a video covering that topic. Here is the link: th-cam.com/video/tNXHUB9RfrQ/w-d-xo.html For your second question, there is a way to use an existing email structure. If I was in your position, I would probably just set up a template and then call it from VBA. Here is a general idea of how it would look: # Declare the object variable. Dim MyTempItem As Outlook.MailItem # Create from a template. Set MyTempItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate("C:\statusrep.oft") # Display that template MyTempItem.Display Let me know if this points you in the right direction.
I wanted to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude for the incredible video tutorial you created. Your expertise, attention to detail, and clear explanations have made a significant impact on my learning journey.
Your dedication to sharing knowledge and helping others is truly commendable. The effort and time you invested in creating this tutorial have not gone unnoticed, and I am incredibly grateful for the valuable insights and skills I have gained from watching it.
Your ability to break down complex concepts into digestible segments and provide practical examples has greatly enhanced my understanding and proficiency in [topic or subject]. Your video tutorial has been an invaluable resource, guiding me through the learning process and inspiring me to explore further.
Thank you once again for sharing your expertise and passion through your exceptional video tutorial. Your contributions have made a positive difference in my learning experience, and I am truly grateful for the knowledge and inspiration you have provided.
With heartfelt appreciation
Thanks for sharing this, really useful. Is there a way to paste chart image such that the original formatting of the chart is maintained?
Hey, thanks for this video, but I am encountering the problem where the code runs successfully and prints the body, subject… but I don’t see any chart any reason why, thank you
great thanks!
Hey, this was very useful, but is their any way by which we can insert some text after one chart and past another chart after that and so on.
Hey, this was very useful! Thanks. I wanted to ask you if there's a way to copy not one but multiple charts into an email. Also, is there a way to paste the charts into an already existing email?
I have a macro that already creates the email and the body has strings and excel ranges in it, and I wanted to add some charts in between.
Thanks in advance
Lucky for you, I already have a video covering that topic. Here is the link: th-cam.com/video/tNXHUB9RfrQ/w-d-xo.html
For your second question, there is a way to use an existing email structure. If I was in your position, I would probably just set up a template and then call it from VBA. Here is a general idea of how it would look:
# Declare the object variable.
Dim MyTempItem As Outlook.MailItem
# Create from a template.
Set MyTempItem = Application.CreateItemFromTemplate("C:\statusrep.oft")
# Display that template
MyTempItem.Display
Let me know if this points you in the right direction.
Sadly threw user defined error on the first line. :( Dim oLookApp As Outlook.Application newb problems
maybe you forgot to add the outlook reference?