If I have Firefox open, and I then open my email client MS Outlook 2000, if there is an email with a html link in it, if I click on this link it does nothing, b
If I have Firefox open, and I then open my email client MS Outlook 2000, if there is an email with a html link in it, if I click on this link it does nothing, but if I close Firefox and then click on that email link Firefox then opens.
I would ultimately find that if I were to try and open another email link it would do nothing until I closed Firefox again.
Gewysig op
Gekose oplossing
wilsonphurwo,
Highlighting the link never ever worked, that was the first thing I had tried, I actually found out the answer myself after I had posted here.
Thankfully when this issue happened previously I had copied the solution to notepad, and it's this I will copy here for anyone else that may come across this problem.
By the way the links are hypertext on my email client MS Outlook 2000, so when trying to copy all it did was copy the text.
Anyway here is the solution to my original issue.
1. Launch My Computer or Windows Explorer. 2. Choose menu 'Tools' -> 'Folder Options' 3. Click the 'File Types' tab. 4. Scroll down to find 'URL:HyperText Transfer Protocol' (under the File Types column) and make sure it's highlighted. 5. Click the 'Advanced' button. 6. In the 'Actions' box make sure that 'open' is highlighted (click on it if necessary) 7. Click the 'Edit' button. 8. Uncheck 'Use DDE', click the Browse button and browse to Firefox.exe on your system, and click OK. [Updated for clarification, sorry about the earlier omission.] If you get a "file not found" message, browse to Firefox.exe and click OK. 9. The path to Firefox.exe should now appear in the 'Application used to perform this action' box. 10. Go to that 'Application used to perform this action' box, and add ' -url "%1" ' at the end, without the single quotes, so that it reads e.g. (on my computer at least) "C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe" -url "%1" - with the double quotes! 10. Click OK again. 11. Repeat the process with the file type 'URL:HyperText Transfer Protocol with Privacy'
Lees dié antwoord in konteks 👍 0All Replies (2)
Okay, maybe I can't fix your problem but you can easily highlight the link then copy it by pressing Ctrl + C then go to Firefox and press Ctrl + V in the address bar then press Enter.
Maybe, you can try to open your email provider (Google Mail, Yahoo Mail, etc.) in the browser then click the link. I hope that can help you.
Gekose oplossing
wilsonphurwo,
Highlighting the link never ever worked, that was the first thing I had tried, I actually found out the answer myself after I had posted here.
Thankfully when this issue happened previously I had copied the solution to notepad, and it's this I will copy here for anyone else that may come across this problem.
By the way the links are hypertext on my email client MS Outlook 2000, so when trying to copy all it did was copy the text.
Anyway here is the solution to my original issue.
1. Launch My Computer or Windows Explorer. 2. Choose menu 'Tools' -> 'Folder Options' 3. Click the 'File Types' tab. 4. Scroll down to find 'URL:HyperText Transfer Protocol' (under the File Types column) and make sure it's highlighted. 5. Click the 'Advanced' button. 6. In the 'Actions' box make sure that 'open' is highlighted (click on it if necessary) 7. Click the 'Edit' button. 8. Uncheck 'Use DDE', click the Browse button and browse to Firefox.exe on your system, and click OK. [Updated for clarification, sorry about the earlier omission.] If you get a "file not found" message, browse to Firefox.exe and click OK. 9. The path to Firefox.exe should now appear in the 'Application used to perform this action' box. 10. Go to that 'Application used to perform this action' box, and add ' -url "%1" ' at the end, without the single quotes, so that it reads e.g. (on my computer at least) "C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe" -url "%1" - with the double quotes! 10. Click OK again. 11. Repeat the process with the file type 'URL:HyperText Transfer Protocol with Privacy'