We're calling on all EU-based Mozillians with iOS or iPadOS devices to help us monitor Apple’s new browser choice screens. Join the effort to hold Big Tech to account!

Search Support

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.

Learn More

Want to switch the default for new messages from "paragraph" format to "body text" format; the answer currently on-line for this does not work

  • 2 replies
  • 1 has this problem
  • 2 views
  • Last reply by dpg22

more options

The answer currently on-line for this problem says to follow the sequence "tools-options-composition" and then change the default, but this sequence "tools-options-composition" does not seem to exist in Thunderbird (at least, in the version I have, 45.4.0). Under "tools", there is no "options" option...

The answer currently on-line for this problem says to follow the sequence "tools-options-composition" and then change the default, but this sequence "tools-options-composition" does not seem to exist in Thunderbird (at least, in the version I have, 45.4.0). Under "tools", there is no "options" option...

Chosen solution

It may depend on which menu you're looking at and which operating system you're using.

Tools|Options|Composition refers to the old-fashioned menu bar across the top.

You can use alt or F10 to make this menu appear temporarily. Go to View|Toolbars and tick the checkboxes if you want it permanently on show.

If you're using the new-fangled "Application Menu" button (with three horizontal lines - see the attached image) then it's probably Options|Options|Composition - I say "probably" because I'm using Linux where "Options" is replaced, I think, by "Preferences". Another complication with this infernal Application Menu is that different things happen depending on if you click or hover. Hover on the first Options and the second will appear after a while.

See http://kb.mozillazine.org/Menu_differences_in_Windows,_Linux,_and_Mac for differences in the menus between Windows, Mac and Linux.

Read this answer in context 👍 0

All Replies (2)

more options

Chosen Solution

It may depend on which menu you're looking at and which operating system you're using.

Tools|Options|Composition refers to the old-fashioned menu bar across the top.

You can use alt or F10 to make this menu appear temporarily. Go to View|Toolbars and tick the checkboxes if you want it permanently on show.

If you're using the new-fangled "Application Menu" button (with three horizontal lines - see the attached image) then it's probably Options|Options|Composition - I say "probably" because I'm using Linux where "Options" is replaced, I think, by "Preferences". Another complication with this infernal Application Menu is that different things happen depending on if you click or hover. Hover on the first Options and the second will appear after a while.

See http://kb.mozillazine.org/Menu_differences_in_Windows,_Linux,_and_Mac for differences in the menus between Windows, Mac and Linux.

Modified by Zenos

more options

Thanks, the trick seems to be knowing that the check box under "Options-options-composition" has an unclear label. The label currently there: "When using paragraph format, the enter key creates a new paragraph"

really means:

"Uncheck this box to switch the default from paragraph format to body text format so the enter key does not skip a line (i.e., so you can get 100% single spacing) in your e-mail messages"

The label currently on the check box does not really suggest that it will give you 100% single spacing, but I just tried it as a more or less random attempt, and it works. The real fix is probably to re-label that check box with text that more clearly describes what the check box does.