Classic ASP
Classic ASP
Attach a File to an Email
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddFileAttachment method, which attaches a file read from the filesystem. It returns the content type Chilkat assigned to the attachment (inferred from the file extension). This example attaches a PDF and prints its detected content type.
Background: Each attachment carries a
Content-Type (MIME type) such as application/pdf or image/png that tells the receiving client how to handle it. Chilkat gets this from the file's extension. Because attachment bytes are binary, they are Base64-encoded for transport, which is handled automatically — you simply point AddFileAttachment at a path and the file is read, encoded, and packaged into the message.Chilkat Classic ASP Downloads
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
</head>
<body>
<%
' Demonstrates the AddFileAttachment method, which attaches a file read from the
' filesystem. It returns the content type Chilkat assigned to the attachment (based on
' the file extension), or returns failure if the file could not be read.
set email = Server.CreateObject("Chilkat.Email")
email.Subject = "Email with a file attachment"
email.Body = "Please see the attached file."
' Attach a file. The return value is the auto-detected content type.
contentType = email.AddFileAttachment("qa_data/attachments/report.pdf")
If (email.LastMethodSuccess = 0) Then
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( email.LastErrorText) & "</pre>"
Response.End
End If
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( "Attached content type = " & contentType) & "</pre>"
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( "NumAttachments = " & email.NumAttachments) & "</pre>"
' Note: The path "qa_data/attachments/report.pdf" is a relative local filesystem path,
' relative to the current working directory of the running application.
%>
</body>
</html>