![]() This ensures you get it right and saves having to work out the keyboard shortcuts to make an accent letter. The real easy way, especially with names, is to copy the word (with accented characters) from some source document or incoming email. It’s good to get a name or word exactly right, if only as a courtesy to the reader. Office and Windows let you enter almost any character, if you know the magic spell. The keyboards don’t show accented letters and it’s not obvious how to type them. Typing accented letters can be a chore and a mystery, especially for those of us unaccustomed to languages with the ‘extra’ letters. Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they helped.Type accented characters accent, grave, circumflex, tilde, umlaut, dieresis or cedilla in Microsoft Word and Outlook when they aren’t on the keyboard such as á ã à ä Ç ç ē é ê è ë â ê î ô û and many more. See the following article if you are not familiar with ![]() You can click the Quick Steps directly or you can also assign keyboard shortcuts to them. See this thread in which our MVP Robert explained this in details.Īs a workaround, you may consider to use Quick Steps in Outlook and see whether it could achieve what you want. As far as I know, it's not a removed feature, it's just not supported. Outlook doesn't provide an option to customize keyboard shortcuts. All in all outlook 2016 is a big step backwards for me compared to outlook 2007 that I was using to full satisfaction but that refuses to install on my new And outlook 2016 refuses to open in the outlook today page. That I want to create a new appointment). ![]() Other annoyances are that I cannot set the calendar to go to the day view when clickin on a day in the month overview (it somehow assumes Insert symbol and searching and clicking on the symbol needed, which takes forever. a mucht quicker solution than having to go In outlook 2007 I was able to assign symbols to shortcuts which allowed me to type French accents with my US layout keyboard using shortcuts, for example ç would be assigned to alt-c. ![]()
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