Classic ASP
Classic ASP
Add a String Attachment with a Specified Charset
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddStringAttachment2 method, which adds a text attachment directly from an in-memory string and encodes it using a specified charset. The first argument is the attachment filename placed in the MIME (it is not a path to an existing file), the second is the text content, and the third is the charset used to encode the string. This example attaches a UTF-8 encoded text file.
Background: This is the charset-aware version of
AddStringAttachment. Because text must be converted to bytes before it travels in a MIME part, the charset determines how non-ASCII characters (accents, non-Latin scripts) are represented. utf-8 is the safe modern default that can encode any character; the third argument may also begin with bom- or no-bom- to control whether a byte-order mark is written.Chilkat Classic ASP Downloads
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
</head>
<body>
<%
' Demonstrates the AddStringAttachment2 method, which adds a text attachment from an
' in-memory string and encodes it using a specified charset. The first argument is the
' attachment filename (not a path to read), the second is the content, the third is the charset.
set email = Server.CreateObject("Chilkat.Email")
email.Subject = "Email with a charset-encoded string attachment"
email.Body = "See the attached text file."
' Add a string attachment named "notes.txt", encoding the content as utf-8.
success = email.AddStringAttachment2("notes.txt","Some notes with accented text.","utf-8")
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( "NumAttachments = " & email.NumAttachments) & "</pre>"
%>
</body>
</html>