Sender (Email subroutine): Difference between revisions
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A null address value is usually acceptable, however. </p> | A null address value is usually acceptable, however. </p> | ||
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==Examples== | |||
For <var>Sender</var> method examples, see [[Email class#Basic e-mail example|"Basic e-mail example"]] and | |||
[[Email class#E-mail with attachment|"E-mail with attachment"]]. | [[Email class#E-mail with attachment|"E-mail with attachment"]]. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Template:Email:Sender footer}} | {{Template:Email:Sender footer}} |
Latest revision as of 21:56, 14 August 2012
Mail sender email address (Email class)
The Sender arguments you provide are
sent to the SMTP server in a "MAIL FROM" command,
and they are also included in the
e-mail content as the "From" mail header.
Syntax
email:Sender( name, [nickname])
Syntax terms
An Email object. | |
name | The e-mail address of the sender. |
nickname | An optional string that contains a familiar name associated with the mail sender. This nickname appears in the e-mail content as part of the "From:" mail header. |
Usage notes
- The sender's e-mail address is not a required header according to protocol,
It is not an error if you omit the Sender method
(or, the equivalent, if you include a Sender call that has a null address)
in your request.
However, if no Sender value is set, no
From:
header is included in the e-mail content unless you explicitly do so using the AddHeader method. In practice, SMTP servers typically want a validly formed sender e-mail address, and they reject e-mail if an included sender address value does not contain an at sign (@) and a domain name (a string ending with a period (.) followed by a domain suffix).Note: The actual existence of such an address is not validated; merely its form. A null address value is usually acceptable, however.
Examples
For Sender method examples, see "Basic e-mail example" and "E-mail with attachment".