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Perl

Set Uncommon Email Options

See more Email Object Examples

Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.UncommonOptions property, a catch-all for uncommon needs. It defaults to the empty string and should typically remain empty. Recognized keywords include NoBccHeader (do not add the Bcc MIME header for BCC addresses — which must be set before calling AddBcc or AddMultipleBcc) and NO_FORMAT_FLOWED (do not automatically add format=flowed to a Content-Type header). This example sets NoBccHeader.

Background: Long-lived libraries accumulate rare, situational tweaks that do not each deserve their own property. Chilkat gathers these into a single keyword-driven UncommonOptions string. NoBccHeader is a good example: normally a Bcc header is generated (and stripped at send time), but certain workflows want it omitted entirely. Only documented keywords have any effect — unrecognized text is ignored — so leave this empty unless a specific compatibility need arises.

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Perl
use chilkat();

#  Demonstrates the Email.UncommonOptions property, a catch-all for uncommon needs.
#  It defaults to empty and should usually remain empty.  Recognized keywords include
#  "NoBccHeader" (do not add the Bcc MIME header) and "NO_FORMAT_FLOWED".

$email = chilkat::CkEmail->new();
$email->put_Subject("UncommonOptions example");
$email->put_From('alice@example.com');

#  Do not add the Bcc MIME header for BCC recipients.  This keyword must be set
#  before calling AddBcc or AddMultipleBcc.
$email->put_UncommonOptions("NoBccHeader");

$email->AddBcc("Joe",'joe@example.com');

print "UncommonOptions = " . $email->uncommonOptions() . "\r\n";