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Visual Basic 6.0

Explaining the Email FromName, FromAddress, and From Properties

See more Email Object Examples

This example explains the email object's FromName, FromAddress, and From properties.

Chilkat Visual Basic 6.0 Downloads

Visual Basic 6.0
' The email's FROM name and address can be set in several ways.
' It can include an optional friendly name (which is just a description),
' and it must include an address.

' For example:
Dim email1 As New ChilkatEmail
email1.Subject = "test"
email1.Body = "test"

email1.FromName = "Joe Sample"
email1.FromAddress = "joe.sample@example.com"

' the From property contains both the FromName and FromAddress
' This produces the following output:
' From: "Joe Sample" <joe.sample@example.com>
Debug.Print "From: " & email1.From
Debug.Print "--------------------------------------------------"

' Examine the MIME of the email:
Debug.Print email1.GetMime()
Debug.Print "--------------------------------------------------"

' Output is:

' 	MIME-Version: 1.0
' 	Date: Wed, 16 Nov 2016 12:32:13 -0600
' 	Message-ID: <02B461C6D12FA6686C3151A649ED8D5BBFBE0721@CHILKAT13>
' 	Content-Type: text/plain
' 	Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
' 	X-Priority: 3 (Normal)
' 	Subject: test
' 	From: "Joe Sample" <joe.sample@example.com>
' 
' 	test

' --------------------------------------------
' Alternatively, the From property can be set, and this 
' implicitly sets the FromName and FromAddress properties.

Dim email2 As New ChilkatEmail
email2.From = "Joe Sample <joe.sample@example.com>"

Debug.Print "FromName: " & email2.FromName
Debug.Print "FromAddress: " & email2.FromAddress
Debug.Print "--------------------------------------------------"

Debug.Print email2.GetMime()