Unicode C
Unicode C
Set a Preferred Charset for an Email
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.PreferredCharset property. It applies only when building an email with non-English characters where the charset has not been explicitly set. Chilkat normally auto-selects a default charset per language (Chinese gb2312, Japanese shift_JIS, Korean ks_c_5601-1987, Thai windows-874, others iso-8859-*), and this property lets you steer that choice — for example choosing iso-2022-jp for Japanese. It is a preference, not a forced conversion: if the preferred charset cannot represent the text, it is ignored. This example sets a preferred charset.
Background: A single language often has several legacy charsets — Japanese, for instance, can be encoded as
shift_JIS, euc-jp, or iso-2022-jp. Some mail environments expect one particular encoding, so PreferredCharset lets you nudge Chilkat toward it. Contrast this with the Charset property, which forces a specific charset: PreferredCharset is only a hint that Chilkat honors when it fits.Chilkat Unicode C Downloads
#include <C_CkEmailW.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
HCkEmailW email;
// Demonstrates the Email.PreferredCharset property. It only applies when building an
// email that contains non-English characters and no charset is explicitly set. Chilkat
// will prefer this charset if it can represent the email's text; otherwise it is ignored.
email = CkEmailW_Create();
CkEmailW_putSubject(email,L"Preferred charset example");
CkEmailW_putBody(email,L"Japanese text would go here.");
// Prefer iso-2022-jp instead of the default shift_JIS for Japanese text.
CkEmailW_putPreferredCharset(email,L"iso-2022-jp");
wprintf(L"PreferredCharset = %s\n",CkEmailW_preferredCharset(email));
CkEmailW_Dispose(email);
}