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Java

Count the Bcc Recipients of an Email

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Demonstrates the read-only Chilkat Email.NumBcc property, which is the number of blind carbon-copy (Bcc) recipients. Bcc recipient indexes are zero-based and can be inspected with GetBcc, GetBccAddr, and GetBccName. This example adds two Bcc recipients and prints the count.

Background: Email has three recipient lists: To (primary), Cc (carbon copy), and Bcc (blind carbon copy). The key difference is visibility: To and Cc addresses appear in the delivered message's headers for everyone to see, but Bcc recipients are hidden — the Bcc header is stripped before delivery so no recipient can tell who else was blind-copied.

Chilkat Java Downloads

Java
import com.chilkatsoft.*;

public class ChilkatExample {

  static {
    try {
        System.loadLibrary("chilkat");
    } catch (UnsatisfiedLinkError e) {
      System.err.println("Native code library failed to load.\n" + e);
      System.exit(1);
    }
  }

  public static void main(String argv[])
  {
    //  Demonstrates the read-only Email.NumBcc property, which is the number of
    //  blind carbon-copy (Bcc) recipients.  Bcc indexes are zero-based.

    CkEmail email = new CkEmail();

    email.AddBcc("Joe","joe@example.com");
    email.AddBcc("Jane","jane@example.com");

    System.out.println("NumBcc = " + email.get_NumBcc());
  }
}