AddBCC (Email subroutine): Difference between revisions
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===Syntax terms=== | ===Syntax terms=== | ||
<table class="syntaxTable"> | <table class="syntaxTable"> | ||
<tr><th> | <tr><th>email</th> | ||
<td>A previously declared Email object. | <td>A previously declared Email object. | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
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<var>[[Mail (Email function)|Mail]]</var>. | <var>[[Mail (Email function)|Mail]]</var>. | ||
</td></tr></table> | </td></tr></table> | ||
==Usage notes== | ==Usage notes== | ||
<ul> | <ul> |
Revision as of 21:35, 5 March 2012
Add a BCCd mail recipient (Email class)
Syntax
email:AddBCC( name, [nickname])
Syntax terms
A previously declared Email object. | |
name | A string expression that contains an email address:
a userid, followed by an at sign (@), followed by a domain name. |
nickname | An optional string expression that contains a familiar name associated
with the e-mail address. For AddBcc, this parameter is superfluous, but it is provided for compatibility with AddRecipient and Mail. |
Usage notes
- Mail servers should be able to accept as many as 100 or more distinct recipients for a single mail message, though stricter limits may be imposed by some mail servers. The recipient count is the sum of all e-mail addresses added with the AddBcc, AddCc, and AddRecipient methods.
- Recipients added with the AddBcc method do not appear in either the "To:" or "Cc:" headers in the e-mail message.
- The optional nickname parameter is provided only for compatibility with the AddRecipient and Mail methods. It is not sent as part of the e-mail message.
- For an example that includes this method, see "Basic e-mail".