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Perl

Save an Email to a Temporary MHT File

See more Email Object Examples

Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.CreateTempMht method, which prepares the email for display in a web browser and saves it as a temporary MHT file, returning the path that was written. If the filename argument is empty, Chilkat chooses a temporary filename.

To make the message viewable as a standalone web page, the method transforms it: all attachments are dropped; if the email has both HTML and plain-text alternatives, the plain-text alternative is dropped; and if the email has only a plain-text body, it is converted to HTML. This example loads an HTML email and creates the temporary MHT.

Background: MHT (MIME HTML) is a single-file web-page-archive format — it packs an HTML document together with its images and style sheets into one file, which is essentially what an HTML email already is. Because a Windows WebBrowser control can navigate directly to an .mht file, writing the message out as MHT is a quick way to render a received email, inline images and all, inside a desktop application. The transformations (dropping attachments, keeping just the HTML representation) ensure the result is a clean, self-contained page. For unpacking to loose files served by a web application instead, see AspUnpack.

Chilkat Perl Downloads

Perl
use chilkat();

$success = 0;

#  Demonstrates the CreateTempMht method, which prepares the email for viewing in a browser
#  and saves it as a temporary MHT (MIME HTML) file, returning the file path.
#  
#  To produce browser-viewable output, CreateTempMht transforms the message: it drops all
#  attachments; if the email has both HTML and plain-text alternatives it drops the
#  plain-text alternative; and if the email has only a plain-text body it converts that
#  body to HTML.  Passing an empty filename lets Chilkat choose a temporary filename.

$email = chilkat::CkEmail->new();

$success = $email->LoadEml("qa_data/eml/html_with_images.eml");
if ($success == 0) {
    print $email->lastErrorText() . "\r\n";
    exit;
}

#  Transform the email for browser display and save it as a temporary MHT file
#  (empty filename = auto-generated temp file).
$mhtPath = $email->createTempMht("");

print "Temporary MHT file: " . $mhtPath . "\r\n";

#  Note: The path "qa_data/..." is a relative local filesystem path,
#  relative to the current working directory of the running application.