Like it or not, email is still a big part of our lives. I feel like I get more email than ever, even if a smaller percentage than ever before is actually meaningful.
In Outlook on the web and Outlook.com, you can use the keyboard shortcuts from Outlook.com, Yahoo Mail, Gmail, or Outlook. This article describes the shortcuts that are available if you choose Outlook. For instructions on how to change the version of the shortcut, go to Change the keyboard shortcuts version. For example, click Font next to New mail to select a default font for new messages, or next to Reply or forward to set a font for outgoing messages. On the Font tab, choose the default Font, Font style, Size, Color & Underline, and Effects. On the Advanced tab, adjust default character spacing and typography. Click OK to save the changes. Change the Default Font in Word for Mac. To get started with changing the default font in Microsoft Word for Mac, first launch the app and then select Format Font from the menu bar at the top of the screen. Alternatively, you can use the keyboard shortcut Command-D. Increase the display size of text in an open message or in the reading pane ⌘ + PLUS (+) Scroll down to the next screen of text or, if you are at the end of a message, display the next message. In the Mail view, open the mail folder where you will highlight unread emails. Click View View Settings to open the Advanced View Settings dialog box.
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/1/7/7/117735229/523647023.png)
But even after all these years, I still rely on Apple’s Mail apps on both the Mac and iOS. That comes with its fair share of frustration, as the company has often been slow to adopt the kind of improvements driven by third-party mail clients. For me, though, what Mail lacks in innovative features it more than makes up for with its integration into Apple’s platforms.
Still, when Apple does decide to update Mail, it’s often cause for celebration, and in iOS 13, there are a number of welcome additions that people—including myself—have spent a long time awaiting.
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First and foremost among them—for me anyway—is the addition of multicolored flags on iOS.1 While this has long been supported on macOS, it’s one of those areas where the two platforms have been out of sync. As someone who uses flags to notate and categorize messages, I’ve been frustrated at the lack of respect for them on iOS.
Finding the multicolored flag options, however, proves a little tricky. You might think it would be an option if you’ve configured the Flag button to appear when you swipe left or right on a message from your mailbox, but no. Nor do they appear in the More… sub-menu you can find by swiping left. Nor do they show up if you long press on a mail message; yes, you can tap Mark and then choose Flag, but it doesn’t give you the option to pick the color.
No, the only place you’ll find the multicolored flag options is, somewhat nonsensically, under the Reply button from a message itself. Tap the Flag button there and you’ll get a sub-menu that lets you choose one of seven colors, as well as an option to remove a flag.
Whatever color you’ve picked there most recently will be treated as the default on that device until you pick another color. So, if you go to flag a message using one of those other methods after choosing a color, you’ll see the Flag button color changed to reflect that. But jump from your iPhone to an iPad and you may have a totally different color.
While this is far from ideal interface-wise, I do at least appreciate that iOS respects the colors of flags set on the Mac, though I wish the flags themselves were a little more prominent in the message list. (They’re very small on the right side and easy to miss.)
Mail in iOS 13 also adds a few new options for those who get overwhelmed by emails—especially unwanted ones. For the first time, you can mute a thread, if you want to stop receiving notifications when the umpteenth email in that scheduling conversation arrives. (Or, as many folks have pointed out, for those ever-popular “replied to a list instead of the sender” moments that tend to take on a life of their own.)
You can also block mail from any contact, which not only prevents you from receiving messages from them in the future, but also moves all of their messages to the trash—and, moreover, syncs across devices.
Additional, Apple has improved composing messages, including a new photo picker that’s now a “card” on the iPhone, allowing it to be swiped up and down so that you can still see your message while you’re picking a photo. (On the iPad, it’s a popover that’s independently scrollable.)
Text formatting is much improved too, earning its own interface in the toolbar, instead of forcing you to navigate through several levels of popover menu. Plus it includes new features like lists, alignment, and font face, size, and color.
But my other favorite improvement to Mail in iOS 13 is an iPad-only capability that came along with the multitasking features: message composition windows can be dragged into Split View mode, so you can write an email while referring to another email. That’s a feature I’ve been hoping for since I was first able to put two Safari tabs side-by-side on the iPad.
That’s not the only thing you can do with a message composition window, either. For a while you’ve been able to drag a draft you’re working on down to the bottom of the screen, so you could keep working in your inbox. But now, on both the iPhone and iPad, you can drag multiple drafts down to the bottom; tapping on them then provides you with an overview, much like the multi-tab view in Safari on the iPhone. It’s a much more powerful—and, dare I say, Mac-like—way of working with your email.
Finally, another welcome improvement is that iOS’s new screenshot interface, which allows you to capture the full text of a web page, also makes it possible to export an entire email message as a PDF. Previously that required a somewhat arcane workaround with the Print interface. The newer methodology isn’t that much faster, but hopefully it’s less obscure.
Not everything in iOS 13’s Mail is an unmitigated improvement, however. For one thing I’ve found the Junk mail filtering to be a bit too aggressive, catching several legitimate messages by mistake. For another, I still question the user experience choice of hiding much of Mail’s functionality behind the Reply menu, including many features that are very much not related to replying to a menu: printing, moving messages, muting threads, and so on. I realize the space is limited, but at least putting many of those features under a Share menu would seem easier for many users to comprehend.
Outlook For Mac Os Change Unread Font Color Chart
[Dan Moren is the official Dan of Six Colors. You can find him on Twitter at @dmoren or reach him by email at [email protected]. His latest novel, The Aleph Extraction, is out now and available in fine book stores everywhere, so be sure to pick up a copy.]
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Last update: December 2019.
Here’s a question from a reader:
I am using Microsoft Office 365. I have noticed that after i click on a specific email entry in the Outlook Mail tab and open it for reading, it shows as read. What’s annoying is that i have noticed that items that i view in the Reading Pane are shown as being read as well… This makes it difficult for me to follow up on my email and take the required action. Now the question is the following: is there a way to modify the read / unread settings to keep my messages marked as unread in Outlook unless i explicitly set them as read (by making a right click and selecting Mark as Read). Thanks in advance for any tips.
Thanks for the question. In our answer, we’ll be covering both Windows and macOS unread settings for Outlook. Here we go:
Don’t make as read on Outlook for Windows
You can follow this procedure to turn off the single click read feature, so that Outlook doesn’t mark messages as read:
- First off, go ahead an open Microsoft Outlook.
- Next, go ahead and hit File, then select Options.
- Select the Mail tab.
- Now, navigate to the Outlook panes section.
- Now, go ahead and hit the Reading Panes button.
- In the opened dialog , go ahead and uncheck the first box as shown below.
- When done, hit the OK button.
- That’s it – auto-read is now turned off.
Note: There is another interesting setting in the Reading Pane, which allows you to mark items as read when selecting different items in your Inbox. The setting is not checked by default, and probably for a good reason.
Stop marking as auto read on macOS
To configure Outlook to stop “opening” your email automatically and keep your previewed email as unread kindly follow these steps:
- Open Microsoft Outlook for macOS.
- From the top menu, select Outlook.
- Now hit Preferences and select Reading.
- In the Mark Email as Read section, select “Only when opened in separate window”
- Hit OK and that’s pretty much it.
Outlook For Mac Os Change Unread Font Colors
Additional questions:
Outlook not marking emails as read?
Couple of readers asked about the opposite use case. You want to preview your email and mark it as read afterwards. Setting the time stamp in the Reading Panes dialog (which control the unread settings) to 2-3 seconds, will most likely do the trick and ensure your emails became read, even if you just previewed them for a short time.
Marking as read when deleting emails
One reader pointed out the fact that by default, that Office doesn’t set deleted mails as read, which becomes visible in the Deleted Items folder.
To ensure deleted items are marked as read, navigate to the Other section bottom of the Outlook Settings dialog at: File>>Options>>Mail, and mark the “Mark messages as read when deleted”.
Using Shortcuts
Readers asked whether they could use shortcuts to quickly mark an email as read or unread.
Ctrl + Q : Will set to read
Ctrl + U: Will mark as unread.
Outlook Unread Messages Settings
Kindly leave us a quick comment in case of any questions.
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