Outlook autocleaning my line breaks and screwing up my email format

.NetUtf 8OutlookSmtp

.Net Problem Overview


I'm sending an email using the dotnet framework. Here is the template that I'm using to create the message:

Date of Hire: %HireDate%
Annual Salary: %AnnualIncome%
Reason for Request: %ReasonForRequest%

Name of Voluntary Employee: %FirstName% %LastName%
Total Coverage Applied For:  %EECoverageAmount%
Guaranteed Coverage Portion: %GICoveragePortion%
Amount Subject to Medical Evident: %GIOverage%

When the messages is received in outlook, outlook tells me "Extra line breaks in this message were removed". And the message displays like this:

Date of Hire: 9/28/2001
Annual Salary: $100,000
Reason for Request: New Hire

Name of Voluntary Employee: Ronald Weasley Total Coverage Applied For:  $500,000 Guaranteed Coverage Portion: $300,000.00 Amount Subject to Medical Evident: $200,000

Note how Outlook incorrectly removes needed line breaks after the name, EECoverageAmount, etc...

It's important for the email recepients to get a correctly formatted email, and I have to assume that some of them use outlook 2003. I also can't assume they will know enough to shutoff the autoclean feature to get the message to format properly.

I have viewed these messages in other mail clients and they display correctly

some more information:

  • I am using UTF-8 BodyEncoding (msg.BodyEncoding = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8)
  • The msg.Body is being read from a UTF-8 encoded text file, and each line is terminated with a crlf.

Question: How do I change the format of the message to avoid this problem?

.Net Solutions


Solution 1 - .Net

You can also insert a tab character at the end of the line (just before the CR LF). This extra white space will be at the end of the line and hence not visible to user. You might prefer this to having to insert spaces on the left. Note that a single space is not enough (though perhaps multiple spaces would help, I don't know.)

Solution 2 - .Net

Start every line with 2 spaces and outlook will be "tricked" into keeping your formatting.

So change

Date of Hire: %HireDate%
Annual Salary: %AnnualIncome%
Reason for Request: %ReasonForRequest%

Name of Voluntary Employee: %FirstName% %LastName%
Total Coverage Applied For:  %EECoverageAmount%
Guaranteed Coverage Portion: %GICoveragePortion%
Amount Subject to Medical Evident: %GIOverage%

to

  Date of Hire: %HireDate%
  Annual Salary: %AnnualIncome%
  Reason for Request: %ReasonForRequest%

  Name of Voluntary Employee: %FirstName% %LastName%
  Total Coverage Applied For:  %EECoverageAmount%
  Guaranteed Coverage Portion: %GICoveragePortion%
  Amount Subject to Medical Evident: %GIOverage%
^^ <--- Two extra spaces at the start of every line

Here is the article I found when researching this problem which goes into a little more depth than my answer.

Solution 3 - .Net

This answer is on how to "disable" the feature from the Outlook Client.

  • Go to Tools -> "Options ..."
  • In the "Preferences" tab click on "Email Options ..."
  • Uncheck the box "Remove extra line breaks in plain text messages."
  • Hit OK

FYI:I am using Outlook 2007

Solution 4 - .Net

Adding "\t\r\n" ( \t for TAB) instead of "\r\n" worked for me on Outlook 2010.

Solution 5 - .Net

I have always had better luck formatting e-mails as html. You may still have the end-user issue of having to set the client to allow html format, but they are usually more familiar with this since so many e-mails do come html formatted. You also have a little more work on your end adding the html tags, but the end result is much more controllable.

@ephemient also suggests: Send as both HTML and plaintext. Good clients will show the latter, Outlook will show the former, everybody is happy (except the programmer who has to do more work).

Solution 6 - .Net

Expanding on the Doug L answer, since I think HTML messaging is even more ubiquitous and accepted now than in 2008 when that answer was posted. Here is a little c# snippet to help convert the body and send the message in HTML format:

body = string.Format("<font face='calibri,arial,sans-serif'>{0}<font/>", body.Replace("\r\n", "<br>"));

using (var smtpClient = new SmtpClient() { Host = smtpHost })
using (var msg = new MailMessage(from, emailDistribution, subject, body) { IsBodyHtml = true })
     smtpClient.Send(msg);

Solution 7 - .Net

Auto cleaning is an outlook feature which removes extra line breaks. You can prevent it by two ways.

  • First way is to add at least 2 extra spaces before lines while sending the email through code. You can add these extra spaces only before those lines which outlook automatically removes.

  • Second way is to change outlook setting which will prevent outlook from removing extra line breaks.

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Solution 8 - .Net

I'm seeing the same problem when generating a plain-text email and then reading it with Outlook 2003 SP3. It appears you can avoid the removal process by it by keep the line length under 40 characters. May not always be practical.

Solution 9 - .Net

Put the text in <pre> Tags and outlook will format and display the text correctly.

i defined it in CSS inline in HTML Body like:

CSS:

pre {
 font-family: Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif;
}

i defined the font-family to have to font set.

HTML:

<td width="70%"><pre>Entry Date/Time:		2013-09-19 17:06:25
Entered By:		Chris

worklog mania

____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Entry Date/Time:		2013-09-19 17:05:42
Entered By:		Chris

this is a new Worklog Entry</pre></td>

Solution 10 - .Net

My text includes '\r\n' but Outlook 2010 does not render line break. Create tokens of lines delimited by '\r\n' and envelope tokens by HTML Paragraph tags. My Email format is HTML. I am generating HTML Body for my email in the code below.

string[] tokens = Regex.Split(objTickt.Description, "\r\n");
  if (tokens.Length > 0)
  {
     foreach (string line in tokens)
     {
         //htmlTW.WriteEncodedText(objTickt.Description.Replace("\r\n", "\n\n"));
         htmlTW.RenderBeginTag(HtmlTextWriterTag.P);
         htmlTW.WriteEncodedText(line);
         htmlTW.RenderEndTag();
     }
  }

Solution 11 - .Net

Change your line termination from crlf to either cr or lf.

I suspect that the top of the email uses only cr (or lf), and Outlook expects the rest of the email to follow the same format.

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionAhehoView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - .NetJim DavisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - .NetAlex BView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - .NetDHornpoutView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - .NetsupernovaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - .NetDoug L.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - .NetHo Ho HoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - .NetBrijesh Kumar TripathiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - .NetGeepView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - .NetChristian CasuttView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - .NetKeyur PatelView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - .NetseanyboyView Answer on Stackoverflow