If needed, please double click the new appointment in the calendar, and modify its Start time and End time.Īpart from adding and copying tasks to calendar, you can view the tasks in your calendar directly. The new appointment is created with Start time near to current time. Step 3: In the Copy Items dialog box, select the Calendar in the Copy the selected items to the folder: box. Note: If you click the Move > Calendar, it will convert the task to appointment directly, and you won’t find out this task in the task view any longer. Step 2: Click the Move > Copy to Folder in the Actions group on the Home tab in the Outlook 2010 / 2013.Īnd in Outlook 2007, please click the Edit > Copy to Folder. Step 1: In the task view, select the task you will copy to your calendar. The other method is with the Move feature. Up to now the task is copied and moved to your calendar, and it shows as an appointment in your calendar.Īdd and copy tasks to calendar with Move feature in Outlook Modify the Start time and End time according to your needs. Step 2: A new appointment window is opening with the content of dragging task.
Note: In Outlook 2013, please move and drag the task to the Calendar button at the bottom of Navigation Pane. Step 1: In the Task view, select a task you will copy to calendar, drag and move it to the Calendar in the Navigation Pane. And the easier one is to drag a task to the calendar folder.
There are two methods to add and copy tasks to calendar. Who knows, maybe I’ll find it soon and post another blog on it soon.Add and copy tasks to calendar with dragging in Outlook I don’t have IM option for notification in O365 SP Online apps. Intrigued about the Lazy approval action in Nintex Workflow. Trust this post helps someone looking for the quick edit link as well. Not bad for the very first custom Nintex workflow in Office 365 SharePoint Online eh! which got the dynamic ID of the task and opens the edit item task for the approver! The auto generated Email Body of the task notification conveniently prepopulates the body with required task items along with a link to the related item.
The Gotcha! moment came when I was trying to modify the Assign a task action for the first approval step. Your will see Nintex Forms and Nintex Workflow ready and available to customize the list with.Ĭlick the Nintex workflow and you will be redirected to the NIntex Workflow Once the list is created with your columns(lookups, person/group, multiline textbox, datetime etc.,) Look at your List tab. There is a Sofware Request form, when a user submits request -> Approver A->Approves->Approver B->Approves->Approver A again for further actions.Ĭreating the custom sharepoint list with the identified fields is nothing new.
My first time with Nintex Form and Nintex Workflow. But what you love need not always be what is loved by all. I love InfoPath Designer and I love SharePoint designer, there is no secondary thought about that. Those who love InfoPath Designer 2013 and SharePoint Designer 2013 can do A LOT of customized workflows, with multiple approval paths, parallel approvals, conditional task and anything else you can think of or not, with the OOTB actions and steps in SharePoint Designer 2013. Office 365 with SharePoint Online has excellent custom form and workflow options, that is a known fact.