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This article is about the software application made by Apple. For address books in general, see address book.
AppleScript support for querying, adding, modifying, and removing people and groups
Problems and Limitations for Business Use
Address Book used to integrate Bluetooth-enabled phones (displaying incoming and missed calls, displaying incoming text messages, letting you send text messages using the phone, etc.) but these features have been entirely disabled in Mac OS 10.5 (Leopard).
Address Book can print either a person's name, or company/affiliation, on a label or envelope, but not both at the same time unless you check print company name in the print menu and you have the contact displayed by name and not company (uncheck company when editing contact.).
Address Book contacts cannot be synchronized with an LDAP server, therefore sharing addresses is nearly impossible.
Relatively primitive de-duplication facility
Can not export to Excel for mass editing - will only export vCards, which are of limited use as a de-duping or filtering tool.
Description
Address Book has two viewing modes: View Card and Column, and View Card Only. The user can switch between modes with a control in the upper-left portion of the window under the close box.
In View Card and Column, the Address Book window is divided into three panes. The first pane has the title Group. This pane lists All, Directories, and each user-made group. Users can add new groups by pulling the File menu down to New Group, or typing Command-Shift-N.
When selecting All or a user-made group, the second column has the title Name. It lists the names of the people with cards in that group, or all the names if the selected group is All, in alphabetical order by first or last name, depending on user preference.
The third pane has the card corresponding to the selected name. The card can include information, some of which the user can classify into customizable categories like Home and Work. Many of the fields can have duplicate entries, for example, if the person the card describes has several email addresses. The user can edit the fields by pressing the edit button below the bottom-left of the third pane. Default fields include:
Address Book can search LDAP directories. Users customize these in the LDAP tab of the preferences. Users search these by selecting Directories in the first pane, selecting a directory or All in the second pane, and typing their search in the search box above the top-left of the third pane. Results appear in the third pane.