On 7/5/05, Steve Onnis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> <cfmail to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> subject="subject line"
> <cfmailpart type="text/plain">this is a message</cfmailpart>
> </cfmail>
I assume there should be a '>' after the subject= attribute.
This has two parts: the explicit <cfmailpart> and the implicit body of
the <cfmail> tag. If you have only one <cfmailpart> tag, the body of
<cfmail> is used to create a default text mail. If you have multiple
<cfmailpart> tags and one of them is text, the last text <cfmailpart>
will be used for the default text mail.
<cfmail to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
subject="subject line">
<cfmailpart type="text">this is the first message</cfmailpart>
<cfmailpart type="text">this is the second message</cfmailpart>
</cfmail>
There will be two parts to this email, the second part will be shown by default.
> By default the CFMAIL type attribute is HTML.
Not according to the docs:
type Optional text/plain MIME type of the message. Can be a
valid MIME media type or one of the following:...
The default type attribute is text.
> If only 1 mime type is set in
> the email like above, it will add another mime area in the email for what
> ever the type attribute is set to.
<cfmailpart> => first mime area
<cfmail> body => second mime area (as text by default)
> So even if i was to change the type attribute to HTML and i send a text only
> email using CFMAILPART, it will add its own html section to the bottom of
> the email.
I don't understand what you are saying here. Both <cfmail> and
<cfmailpart> have a type= attribute...
--
Sean A Corfield -- http://corfield.org/
Team Fusebox -- http://fusebox.org/
Got Gmail? -- I have 50, yes 50, invites to give away!
"If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive."
-- Margaret Atwood
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