[ Home  |  FAQ-Related Q&As  |  General Q&As  |  Answered Questions ]


    Search the Q&A Archives


I am in the process of developing an application which talks...

<< Back to: What's New in the MH FAQ

Question by JP
Submitted on 12/22/2003
Related FAQ: What's New in the MH FAQ
Rating: Not yet rated Rate this question: Vote
I am in the process of developing an application which talks directly to smtp to send mail and attachments.  To date I have had some success, but I've got headers leaking into attachments etc. when my mail reader tries to read what I've sent.
I am trying to find a definition, NOT for the MIME headers, but on what order these headers and subsequent boundaries should follow so that whatever I send in whatever order is properly decoded.  I've been crawling over tons of RFC's and following from one link to another - but to date have had no success in finding any mention of this order.


Your answer will be published for anyone to see and rate.  Your answer will not be displayed immediately.  If you'd like to get expert points and benefit from positive ratings, please create a new account or login into an existing account below.


Your name or nickname:
If you'd like to create a new account or access your existing account, put in your password here:
Your answer:

FAQS.ORG reserves the right to edit your answer as to improve its clarity.  By submitting your answer you authorize FAQS.ORG to publish your answer on the WWW without any restrictions. You agree to hold harmless and indemnify FAQS.ORG against any claims, costs, or damages resulting from publishing your answer.

 

FAQS.ORG makes no guarantees as to the accuracy of the posts. Each post is the personal opinion of the poster. These posts are not intended to substitute for medical, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. FAQS.ORG does not endorse any opinion or any product or service mentioned mentioned in these posts.

 

<< Back to: What's New in the MH FAQ


[ Home  |  FAQ-Related Q&As  |  General Q&As  |  Answered Questions ]

© 2008 FAQS.ORG. All rights reserved.