Ruby
Ruby
Get the Nth Binary Part of a Content-Type into BinData
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.GetNthBinaryPartOfTypeBd method, which loads the binary bytes of the Nth MIME sub-part matching a content-type pattern into a BinData object. The arguments are the zero-based index among the matching parts, the content-type pattern, an inlineOnly flag, an excludeAttachments flag, and the BinData that receives the bytes. This example extracts the first image/png part.
Background: This is the binary, type-targeted way to pull a specific part out of a message — ideal for extracting, say, every
image/png or the one application/pdf from a complex MIME tree without caring whether it is an attachment, an inline image, or a body part. Reading into a BinData keeps the raw bytes exact, ready to save, hash, or re-transmit.Chilkat Ruby Downloads
require 'chilkat'
success = false
# Demonstrates the GetNthBinaryPartOfTypeBd method, which loads the binary bytes of the Nth
# MIME sub-part matching a Content-Type pattern into a BinData object. The arguments are
# the zero-based index among matching parts, the Content-Type pattern, inlineOnly,
# excludeAttachments, and the BinData that receives the bytes.
email = Chilkat::CkEmail.new()
email.put_Subject("GetNthBinaryPartOfTypeBd example")
email.put_Body("See the attached image.")
# Load the image from a file into a BinData object and attach it (binary data belongs
# in a BinData, never in a string).
bdImage = Chilkat::CkBinData.new()
success = bdImage.LoadFile("qa_data/images/photo.png")
if (success == false)
print bdImage.lastErrorText() + "\n";
exit
end
success = email.AddAttachmentBd("photo.png",bdImage,"image/png")
if (success == false)
print email.lastErrorText() + "\n";
exit
end
# Load the bytes of the first (index 0) image/png part into a BinData object.
bd = Chilkat::CkBinData.new()
success = email.GetNthBinaryPartOfTypeBd(0,"image/png",false,false,bd)
if (success == false)
print email.lastErrorText() + "\n";
exit
end
print "image/png part size (bytes) = " + bd.get_NumBytes().to_s() + "\n";
# Note: The path "qa_data/images/photo.png" is a relative local filesystem path,
# relative to the current working directory of the running application.