Java
Java
Count the Replace Patterns Set on an Email
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the read-only Chilkat Email.NumReplacePatterns property, which returns how many replacement patterns have been set via SetReplacePattern. When replacement patterns are present, the email bodies and header fields are modified by applying the search/replacement strings during the sending process. Pattern indexes are zero-based. This example sets two patterns and prints the count.
Background: This is Chilkat's built-in mail merge. You compose one email containing placeholder tokens (for example
FIRST_NAME or CITY), register each token and its replacement with SetReplacePattern, and the substitutions are applied when the message is sent — letting you personalize a bulk mailing without building a separate message for every recipient.Chilkat Java Downloads
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.NumReplacePatterns property. Replace patterns are
// search/replacement strings (set with SetReplacePattern) that are applied to the email
// bodies and header fields during mail-merge sending. Indexes are zero-based.
CkEmail email = new CkEmail();
email.put_Subject("Hello FIRST_NAME");
email.put_Body("Dear FIRST_NAME, your order ships to CITY.");
email.SetReplacePattern("FIRST_NAME","John");
email.SetReplacePattern("CITY","Denver");
System.out.println("NumReplacePatterns = " + email.get_NumReplacePatterns());
}
}