7
Send Basic Email
-1
Send Basic Email
4
Send a Mail using Lotus Notes
12
Another solution recommends using a text match pattern.
This works, but as long as you've got mail.jar in your classpath anyway, you might as well use this technique instead. (Plus, I think it works with older JDK 1.2+, whereas pattern.compile is 1.4+)
Note that it also accepts a comma-separated list of emails, just like a To: or CC: address line would.
This works, but as long as you've got mail.jar in your classpath anyway, you might as well use this technique instead. (Plus, I think it works with older JDK 1.2+, whereas pattern.compile is 1.4+)
Note that it also accepts a comma-separated list of emails, just like a To: or CC: address line would.
13
I needed to send an email through an authenticated SMTP server. I found the snippet on the PHP website to do the trick.
-1
Just a simple check to make sure that a person's email address matches their domain.
For example .. in a form you have 2 textboxs .. 1 for their website url, the other for their email address. This checks to see if the domains for the email address and the website url match.
For example .. in a form you have 2 textboxs .. 1 for their website url, the other for their email address. This checks to see if the domains for the email address and the website url match.
5
Simple function to check for a valid email address. Makes sure the @ and a . are in the right place. There is most likely a perl package on CPAN that would be more extensive, but this happens to work for my uses.
12
Here's a simple JavaScript solution to hide your e-mail from many spam scripts while still providing clickable hyperlinks to your visitors.
Web crawlers and visitors with JavaScript disabled will see: me [at] mydomain [dot] com. I've seen a lot of people that just leave it at this, but it seems a bit unprofessional in my opinion. With the following code, we can replace that with a fully functional hyperlink.
Web crawlers and visitors with JavaScript disabled will see: me [at] mydomain [dot] com. I've seen a lot of people that just leave it at this, but it seems a bit unprofessional in my opinion. With the following code, we can replace that with a fully functional hyperlink.
4
This perl subroutine uses the CPAN module Mail::Webmail::Gmail to iterate through a Gmail account searching for a particular string. If a match is found, the sender's name along with his/her email address, the subject, and the "blurb" is printed to standard out. Also, all messages found will be archived automatically within Gmail to clear the message from the inbox folder. The subroutine returns the number of messages found back to the calling environment.
Sample invocation: check_email(username, password);
By default, the subroutine will use encryption to connect to Gmail however, by setting encrypt_session to '0' will disable encryption.
Sample invocation: check_email(username, password);
By default, the subroutine will use encryption to connect to Gmail however, by setting encrypt_session to '0' will disable encryption.
5
This snippet illustrates following:
1. Using http request to get the data
2. Parsing RSS feeds
3. Sending email
1. Using http request to get the data
2. Parsing RSS feeds
3. Sending email









