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Tcl

Get a Bcc Recipient's Name Only

See more Email Object Examples

Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.GetBccName method, which returns only the friendly-name part (not the address) of the Nth blind carbon-copy recipient. The index is zero-based. This example adds two Bcc recipients and prints each one's display name.

Background: The display name is the human-friendly label attached to an address, like Joe Smith for joe@example.com. It is optional and purely cosmetic, but useful for presentation — for instance rendering "Joe Smith" in a UI instead of the raw address. GetBccName returns just that name; if a recipient was added without one, the result is empty.

Chilkat Tcl Downloads

Tcl

load ./chilkat.dll

#  Demonstrates the GetBccName method, which returns only the friendly-name part (not the
#  address) of the Nth blind carbon-copy recipient.  The index is zero-based.

set email [new_CkEmail]

CkEmail_put_Subject $email "GetBccName example"

CkEmail_AddBcc $email "Joe Smith" "joe@example.com"
CkEmail_AddBcc $email "Jane Doe" "jane@example.com"

set n [CkEmail_get_NumBcc $email]

for {set i 0} {$i <= [expr $n - 1]} {incr i} {
    puts "Bcc $i name: [CkEmail_getBccName $email $i]"
}

delete_CkEmail $email