C++
C++
Add a Custom Header to a Related Item
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddRelatedHeader method, which adds a custom MIME header field to an existing related item identified by its zero-based index. This example first adds a related style sheet (which becomes index 0) and captures its generated Content-ID, builds an HTML body that references the style sheet by that cid:, then attaches an extra header field to the related item and prints the resulting MIME.
Background: Like attachments, each related item (an inline image, style sheet, etc.) is a MIME part with its own small header block describing that part —
Content-Type, Content-ID, Content-Location, and so on. AddRelatedHeader lets you insert additional fields into that per-part block, which is occasionally required for interoperability with clients that look for specific custom headers on embedded resources.Chilkat C++ Downloads
#include <CkEmail.h>
#include <CkStringBuilder.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
// Demonstrates the AddRelatedHeader method, which adds a custom MIME header field to an
// existing related item, identified by its zero-based index.
CkEmail email;
email.put_Subject("Related item with a custom header");
// Add a related item first (a style sheet); capture its generated Content-ID. It becomes
// related-item index 0.
const char *cid = email.addRelatedString("styles.css","body { color: black; }","utf-8");
if (email.get_LastMethodSuccess() == false) {
std::cout << email.lastErrorText() << "\r\n";
return true;
}
// Build the HTML body, referencing the related style sheet by its Content-ID. A
// placeholder is used and then replaced with the actual Content-ID.
CkStringBuilder sbHtml;
sbHtml.Append("<html><head><link rel=\"stylesheet\" href=\"cid:PLACEHOLDER_CID\"/></head><body>Styled content.</body></html>");
int numReplaced = sbHtml.Replace("PLACEHOLDER_CID",cid);
email.SetHtmlBody(sbHtml.getAsString());
// Add a custom header field to the first related item (index 0).
email.AddRelatedHeader(0,"X-Custom-Related-Header","some value");
// The custom header now appears in the related item's MIME part.
std::cout << email.getMime() << "\r\n";
}