Set Microsoft Word As Default For Rtf On Mac

  

Beginning with Office 2016, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint have a High fidelity image resolution option that allows you to insert a picture into a document with minimal compression for optimal rendering on high-resolution displays.

Set Microsoft Word As Default For Rtf On Mac

If you notice a loss in image quality or pixilation when inserting pictures, you may want to change the default resolution for your document to high fidelity. Choosing the high fidelity resolution ensures that pictures are not compressed unless they exceed the size of the document canvas, that minimal compression is applied if necessary, and that the original aspect ratio is maintained.

In PowerPoint 2016 and newer versions, the default image resolution is already set to high fidelity.

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To change the default resolution to high fidelity in Word or Excel (version 2016 or newer):

A standard RTF file consists of ASCII to represent rich text and with non-ASCII characters that is converted to appropriate code values. Newer versions of Word can read RTF files generated with previous versions, while the older versions ignore control words and groups they don’t understand. In File menu (from finder) hold down option key while while selecting Show inspector. Down toward the bottom middle is a selection called Open with. Click on button and choose Word. Below Open with is a another selection called Make default. Click on it and choose okay.

Set Microsoft Word As Default For Rtf On Mac Pro

  1. Click File > Options > Advanced.

  2. Under Image Size and Quality, select High fidelity in the Default resolution list.

By default, your Mac will open it with TextEdit, Apple’s built-in simple text-editing app. To change that, Ctrl+click the file in question, then click Get Info. This will bring up a new window. The sample RTF reader is not a for-sale product, and Microsoft does not provide technical or any other type of support for the sample RTF reader code or the RTF specification. RTF Version 1.5 has been updated to include all new control words introduced by Microsoft Word for Windows 95 version 7.0 and Word 97 for Windows.

To change the default resolution to high fidelity in Word or Excel (version 2016 or newer):

  1. Click the app-name menu (Word or Excel) > Preferences. Then, under Authoring and Proofing Tools, select Edit.

  2. Under Image Size and Quality, in the Default resolution list, select High fidelity.

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There are settings in Outlook, Outlook on the web, and Exchange Online that control the format of email messages and how they are sent to people on other domains. The default settings work in most cases. If specific recipients have trouble reading messages sent from your organization, you can adjust the settings for individual users, or for all users on a specific domain. For example, you can prevent recipients from receiving a winmail.dat attachment.

Set Microsoft Word As Default For Rtf On Mac Os

There are two types of settings you can use:

  • Message format: When a user creates a message, they can choose the message format in which to author the message. In Outlook, they have a choice between plain text, HTML, and rich-text format. In Outlook on the web (formerly known as Outlook Web App) they have a choice between plain text and HTML.

  • Message transmission: This means how the message is actually sent to the other email system. Exchange can send messages to other domains by using Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) or Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF). All three message formats can be sent using TNEF. Only HTML and plain text can be sent using MIME. Message transmission format can be set by an admin per domain or per recipient, and users can also specify message transmission format.

Message formats

The following list describes the three message formats available in Exchange Online, and shows which ones are available in Outlook and Outlook on the web:

Set microsoft word as default for rtf on mac desktop
FormatDescriptionAvailable in OutlookAvailable in Outlook on the web
Plain textA plain text message uses only US-ASCII text as described in RFC 2822. The message can't contain different fonts or other text formatting.YesYes
HTMLAn HTML message supports text formatting, background images, tables, bullet points, and other graphical elements.YesYes
Rich text format (RTF)RTF supports text formatting and other graphical elements.
Only Outlook, Outlook on the web, and a few other MAPI email clients understand RTF messages.
YesCan read messages formatted in RTF, but can't format or send this format

Message transmission formats for mail sent to external recipients

The following table describes the message transmission formats that Exchange Online uses to send email messages to external recipients.

Set microsoft word as default for rtf on mac os
Transmission formatDescription
Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF)TNEF is a Microsoft-specific format for transmitting formatted email messages. A TNEF message contains a plain text version of the message and an attachment that packages the original formatted version of the message. Typically, this attachment is named Winmail.dat. The Winmail.dat attachment includes formatting, attachments, and Outlook-specific features such as meeting requests.
An email client that fully understands TNEF, such as Outlook, processes the Winmail.dat attachment and displays the original message content without ever displaying the Winmail.dat attachment. An email client that doesn't understand TNEF may present a TNEF message in any of the following ways:
The plain text version of the message is displayed, and the message contains an attachment named Winmail.dat, Win.dat, or some other generic name such as Att_nnnnn_.dat or Att_nnnnn_.eml where the nnnnn placeholder represents a random number.
The plain text version of the message is displayed. The TNEF attachment is ignored or removed. The result is a plain text message.
There are third-party utilities that can help convert Winmail.dat attachments.
Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME)MIME is an internet standard that supports text in character sets other than ASCII, non-text attachments, message bodies with multiple parts, and header information in non-ASCII character sets.
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Message format and transmission settings

Admins and users can control message formatting and transmission. Admin settings override user settings.

Admins can control the following settings:

  • Remote domain settings: Remote domain settings control the format of messages sent to people on the remote domain. You can control the format for a specific external domain, or for all external domains. For more information about remote domains, see Remote domains in Exchange Online. The remote domain settings override the per-user settings set by admins or users.

  • Mail user and mail contact settings: You can change settings for individual recipients by changing settings for specific mail users or mail contacts. Mail users and mail contacts are similar because both have external email addresses and contain information about people outside the Exchange Online organization. The main difference is mail users have user IDs that can be used to sign in to the Exchange Online organization. When an admin changes a per-recipient setting, it overrides settings that a user sets for that recipient. For more information about the admin settings, see Manage mail users and Manage mail contacts.

Users can control the following settings:

  • Outlook settings: In Outlook, you can set the message formatting and encoding options described in the following list:

    • Message format: You can set the default message format for all messages. You can override the default message format as you compose a specific message.

    • Internet message format: You can control whether TNEF messages are sent to remote recipients or whether they are first converted to a more compatible format. You can also specify various message encoding options for messages sent to remote recipients. These settings don't apply to messages sent to recipients in the Exchange Online organization.

    • Internet recipient message format: You can control whether TNEF messages are sent to specific recipients or whether they are first converted to a more compatible format. You can set the options for specific contacts in your Contacts folder, and you can override these options for a specific recipient in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields as you compose a message. These options aren't available for recipients in the Exchange Online organization.

    • Internet recipient message encoding options: You can control the MIME or plain text encoding options for specific contacts in your Contacts folder, and you can override these options for a specific recipient in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields as you compose a message. These options aren't available for recipients in the Exchange Online organization.

    • International options: You can control the character sets used in messages.

    For more information about Outlook settings, see Change the message format in Outlook.

  • Outlook on the web settings: You can set the default message format for all messages. You can override the default message format as you compose a specific message.