Android™
Android™
Get a Bcc Recipient's Address Only
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.GetBccAddr method, which returns only the address part (not the friendly-name part) of the Nth blind carbon-copy recipient. The index is zero-based. This example adds two Bcc recipients and prints each one's address.
Background: A recipient entry has two parts — a display name and an email address — and only the address is used for actual delivery. When your program needs the address itself (to validate it, deduplicate a list, or look it up in a directory),
GetBccAddr gives you the bare user@domain without the surrounding display name, avoiding any parsing on your part.Chilkat Android™ Downloads
// Important: Don't forget to include the call to System.loadLibrary
// as shown at the bottom of this code sample.
package com.test;
import android.app.Activity;
import com.chilkatsoft.*;
import android.widget.TextView;
import android.os.Bundle;
public class SimpleActivity extends Activity {
private static final String TAG = "Chilkat";
// Called when the activity is first created.
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
// Demonstrates the GetBccAddr method, which returns only the address part (not the
// friendly name) of the Nth blind carbon-copy recipient. The index is zero-based.
CkEmail email = new CkEmail();
email.put_Subject("GetBccAddr example");
email.AddBcc("Joe Smith","joe@example.com");
email.AddBcc("Jane Doe","jane@example.com");
int n = email.get_NumBcc();
int i;
for (i = 0; i <= n - 1; i++) {
Log.i(TAG, "Bcc " + String.valueOf(i) + " address: " + email.getBccAddr(i));
}
}
static {
System.loadLibrary("chilkat");
// Note: If the incorrect library name is passed to System.loadLibrary,
// then you will see the following error message at application startup:
//"The application <your-application-name> has stopped unexpectedly. Please try again."
}
}