Deliver
Description
Delivers the mail message.
After calling this method, you can make changes to the object without affecting the e-mail message that was just sent.
Syntax
VBScript
MailMsg.Deliver
Perl
$MailMsg->Deliver();
- Identifier
- Description
- MailMsg
- A Mail Message object, representing the mail message to be sent.
- Return value
- None.
Examples
VBScript
Dim OleMailMsg
' Session and logon needed if GetUserEmail is used. For example,
' Dim sessionObj
' Set sessionObj = GetSession
' sessionObj.UserLogon loginname, password, dbName, AD_PRIVATE_SESSION, ""
Set OleMailMsg = CreateObject("PAINET.MAILMSG")
msg_from = "admin@example.com"
OleMailMsg.SetFrom(msg_from)
msg_to = "admin@example.com"
OleMailMsg.AddTo(msg_to)
' You must log in to a database session if GetUserEmail is used.
msg_cc = "user_email_address"
' Or this: msg_cc = sessionObj.GetUserEmail
OleMailMsg.AddCc(msg_cc)
msg_subject = "Hello"
OleMailMsg.SetSubject(msg_subject)
msg_body = "This message brought to you from cqole!\n"
OleMailMsg.SetBody(msg_body)
OleMailMsg.Deliver
Perl
use CQPerlExt;
# Session and logon needed if GetUserEmail is used. For example,
# my $sessionObj = CQSession::Build();
# $sessionObj->UserLogon( $loginname, $password, $dbName, "" );
my $mailmsg = CQMailMsg::Build();
# there is currently no SetFrom method for CQPerl
$msg_to = 'admin@us.ibm.com';
$mailmsg->AddTo($msg_to);
# You must log in to a database session if GetUserEmail is used.
$msg_cc = "user_email_address";
# Or this: $msg_cc = $sessionObj->GetUserEmail();
$mailmsg->AddCc($msg_cc);
$msg_subject = "Hello";
$mailmsg->SetSubject($msg_subject);
$msg_body = "This message brought to you from cqperl!\n";
$mailmsg->SetBody($msg_body);
$mailmsg->Deliver();
CQMailMsg::Unbuild($mailmsg);
# CQSession::Unbuild($sessionObj);