



It's simpleįor anyone who cannot get regular debugging to work, for whatever reason, here's 2 work-arounds I'm using which so-far are at least "ok". How can I develop such an add-in and debug it? I have Googled, but there is a paucity of information. Is there some other/better way to debug a web-based app? I was thinking of switching to web based email for development, butġ) I won't have a main toolbar, and would have to temporarily move my icon, andĢ), I tried that before, but couldn't the output of console.log() or alert(), even as the first statement of my Angular JS controller.
#Outlook 365 add ins ever how to
I see no pop-up when clicking the icon, but am stymied as to how to debug such an add-in from the Outlook desktop client. I already have the icon on the main toolbar (desktop client only, as does not have a toolbar, and it looks like .displayDialogAsync() should pop up an HTML page as a dialog. Even if some files were password-protected, this tool is capable to open and repair them. Select the add-ins that you want to disable and click OK. The steps to disable add-ins are listed below: Open Outlook and select File. One can easily use the tool to view and repair OST files. If you can open Outlook in safe mode, try to disable the add-ins one-by-one and check if it resolves the issue. Ideally, I want to add an icon to the main toolbar and, when clicked, I want it to pop up a dialog (which will be an HTML page running an existing Angular JS app). Kernel OST Viewer is one of the best Outlook repair tool Office 365, available for free. I am struggling to even begin developing my first Outlook web add-in. If I find out how, I will post an answer. If anyone can answer this in future, I will award a bounty. It looks like my bounty is about to expire, with nary an answer.
