C++
C++
Attach a File with an Explicit Content Type
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddFileAttachment2 method, which attaches a file from the filesystem and lets you explicitly specify its content type rather than having Chilkat infer it from the file extension. This example attaches a binary file as application/octet-stream.
Background: Extension-based type detection is convenient but not always right — a file may have an unusual or missing extension, or you may need a very specific MIME type for the recipient to process it correctly. Specifying the content type explicitly removes the guesswork.
application/octet-stream is the generic "arbitrary binary data" type, a safe default that tells the client to treat the attachment as an opaque download rather than trying to render it.Chilkat C++ Downloads
#include <CkEmail.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
bool success = false;
// Demonstrates the AddFileAttachment2 method, which attaches a file and lets you
// explicitly specify its content type instead of letting Chilkat infer it.
CkEmail email;
email.put_Subject("Email with a file attachment");
email.put_Body("Please see the attached file.");
// Attach a file, explicitly specifying the content type.
success = email.AddFileAttachment2("qa_data/attachments/data.bin","application/octet-stream");
if (success == false) {
std::cout << email.lastErrorText() << "\r\n";
return true;
}
std::cout << "NumAttachments = " << email.get_NumAttachments() << "\r\n";
// Note: The path "qa_data/attachments/data.bin" is a relative local filesystem path,
// relative to the current working directory of the running application.
}