MailDefinition.CreateMailMessage Method (String, IDictionary, String, Control)
Assembly: System.Web (in system.web.dll)
public:
MailMessage^ CreateMailMessage (
String^ recipients,
IDictionary^ replacements,
String^ body,
Control^ owner
)
public MailMessage CreateMailMessage ( String recipients, IDictionary replacements, String body, Control owner )
public function CreateMailMessage ( recipients : String, replacements : IDictionary, body : String, owner : Control ) : MailMessage
Not applicable.
Parameters
- recipients
The comma-separated list of recipients.
- replacements
An IDictionary containing a list of strings and their replacement strings.
- body
The text of the e-mail message.
- owner
The Control that owns this MailDefinition.
Return Value
A new MailMessage.| Exception type | Condition |
|---|---|
| replacements does not contain strings. | |
| The From value in the SMTP section of the configuration file is a null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic) or an empty string (""). - or - recipients contains an incorrect e-mail address. | |
| owner is a null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic). |
The CreateMailMessage method creates a new MailMessage object that can be sent with the System.Net.Mail.SmtpClient.Send(System.String,System.String,System.String,System.String) method.
The recipients parameter contains a comma-separated list of recipients of the e-mail message. If the recipients parameter contains an improperly formatted Internet e-mail address, the Send method throws an HttpException exception and the e-mail message is not sent.
The replacements parameter is an IDictionary instance that contains a list of strings to substitute. Strings are replaced in the order in which they were added to the IDictionary collection, and they can overwrite earlier replacements.
The body parameter contains the text of the e-mail message.
The owner parameter indicates which control is the parent of the MailDefinition control. It determines which directory to search for the text file specified in the BodyFileName property.
The following code example creates a ListDictionary object that defines two strings ("<%To%>" and "<%From%>") that are replaced in the e-mail message.
This code example is part of a larger example provided for the MailDefinition class.
The following code example uses the CreateMailMessage method to create a new e-mail message from text entered in a TextBox control on a Web Forms page.
This code example is part of a larger example provided for the MailDefinition class.