I think you meant that HTTP is for port 80. HTML is a markup language, not a protocol. Anyway, you can use HTTP on any port. Port 80 is what is webservers conventionally listen to.

HTML in email is difficult mostly because there are so many email clients with different ideas of how to implement the HTML DOM. Think about it: not even the two major browsers on the market today can agree on this (Firefox, IE).

I agree that it's a waste of time, but sometimes you don't have control over whether you have to do something like this or not.

Billy

On Apr 26, 2007, at 5:29 AM, David Krings wrote:

Aniesh joseph wrote:
Hello All,
I am trying to send one mail with HTML content. To do this, I have added HML header to mail function.

I really wonder why? HTML is for port 80, not 21. HTML in emails is IMHO the biggest waste ever. Nobody likes it, but almost everybody sends it. If it is about adding graphics or other non-text content that is necessary, create an attachment. Sorry to sound so harsh, but in fact, not doing HTML emails will likely solve your problem.

David
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