VBScript
VBScript
Add a Related Item from BinData by Content-Location
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddRelatedBd2 method, which adds a related item using the binary data in a BinData object, addressed by Content-Location. The second argument specifies the filename, path, or URL used by the corresponding HTML reference. This example embeds an image referenced as logo.png.
Background: This is the binary counterpart of
AddRelatedString2 and the Content-Location sibling of AddRelatedBd. Instead of a generated cid: reference, the HTML keeps an ordinary src="logo.png" and the related part is matched to it by name — convenient when turning an existing web page into an email so its original relative URLs keep working.Chilkat VBScript Downloads
Dim fso, outFile
Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
'Create a Unicode (utf-16) output text file.
Set outFile = fso.CreateTextFile("output.txt", True, True)
success = 0
' Demonstrates the AddRelatedBd2 method, which adds a related item using the binary data in
' a BinData object, addressed by Content-Location. The second argument specifies the filename/path/URL
' used by the corresponding HTML reference.
set email = CreateObject("Chilkat.Email")
email.Subject = "Related image from BinData (Content-Location)"
' The HTML references the image by the same name used as the Content-Location.
email.SetHtmlBody "<html><body><img src=""logo.png""/></body></html>"
' Load the image data from a file into a BinData object.
set bdImage = CreateObject("Chilkat.BinData")
success = bdImage.LoadFile("qa_data/images/logo.png")
If (success = 0) Then
outFile.WriteLine(bdImage.LastErrorText)
WScript.Quit
End If
' Add the image as a related item addressed by Content-Location "logo.png".
success = email.AddRelatedBd2(bdImage,"logo.png")
If (success = 0) Then
outFile.WriteLine(email.LastErrorText)
WScript.Quit
End If
outFile.WriteLine("NumRelatedItems = " & email.NumRelatedItems)
' Note: The path "qa_data/images/logo.png" is a relative local filesystem path,
' relative to the current working directory of the running application.
outFile.Close