Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Etsi tuesta

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Lue lisää

.csv attachment opens in Notepad, not in Excel

  • 1 vastaus
  • 1 henkilöllä on sama ongelma
  • 1 näyttö
  • Viimeisin kirjoittaja Matt

more options

Hi,

When I click on a .csv attachment in an incoming email, it automatically opens in Notepad. How can I change this to open it in Excel?

If I go to Options/Options/Attachments/Incoming, I see a list of file types and associated actions for them. But I cannot add an item to this list.

I am using TB 68.12.1 (32-bit).

Windows is set to open .csv with Excel, so if I save the attachment and then open it outside TB, it opens correctly in Excel.

Thanks.

Hi, When I click on a .csv attachment in an incoming email, it automatically opens in Notepad. How can I change this to open it in Excel? If I go to Options/Options/Attachments/Incoming, I see a list of file types and associated actions for them. But I cannot add an item to this list. I am using TB 68.12.1 (32-bit). Windows is set to open .csv with Excel, so if I save the attachment and then open it outside TB, it opens correctly in Excel. Thanks.

Kaikki vastaukset (1)

more options

Thunderbird uses the internet style media types when deciding what action to take with an attachment. In is styling the file extension is not only irrelevant, it is optional. Only to the windows operating system is a file extension more than a decoration.

Registered text media type are listed here https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml#text

Despite common terminology, attachments are not files. They are mime encoded text in the boday of an email. They only become files when you elect to do something with them, at which point the MIME text in the email is converted to a file and written to the file system.

This is the beginning of a mime encoded block for a PDF file

--Boundary.1633693627
Content-Type: application/pdf; name="TRPB_1_1678965312.pdf"
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="TRPB_1_1678965312.pdf"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

When Thunderbird processes this document it will create a file names as specified and it will take action on the file based on the settings for that Content Type:

I suggest you check your incoming mail if correctly encoded by the sender using the content type: text/CSV. (Ctrl+U opens the message source and you now know what sort of formatting to look out for to determine the file type). My guess is the file is not correctly encoded as CSV, but as something associated with notepad, like plain text.