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- Creating Messages
- =================
-
- Creating messages in Swift Mailer is done by making use of the various MIME
- entities provided with the library. Complex messages can be quickly created
- with very little effort.
-
- Quick Reference for Creating a Message
- ---------------------------------------
-
- You can think of creating a Message as being similar to the steps you perform
- when you click the Compose button in your mail client. You give it a subject,
- specify some recipients, add any attachments and write your message.
-
- To create a Message:
-
- * Call the ``newInstance()`` method of ``Swift_Message``.
-
- * Set your sender address (``From:``) with ``setFrom()`` or ``setSender()``.
-
- * Set a subject line with ``setSubject()``.
-
- * Set recipients with ``setTo()``, ``setCc()`` and/or ``setBcc()``.
-
- * Set a body with ``setBody()``.
-
- * Add attachments with ``attach()``.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- require_once 'lib/swift_required.php';
-
- //Create the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance()
-
- //Give the message a subject
- ->setSubject('Your subject')
-
- //Set the From address with an associative array
- ->setFrom(array('john@doe.com' => 'John Doe'))
-
- //Set the To addresses with an associative array
- ->setTo(array('receiver@domain.org', 'other@domain.org' => 'A name'))
-
- //Give it a body
- ->setBody('Here is the message itself')
-
- //And optionally an alternative body
- ->addPart('<q>Here is the message itself</q>', 'text/html')
-
- //Optionally add any attachments
- ->attach(Swift_Attachment::fromPath('my-document.pdf'))
- ;
-
- Message Basics
- --------------
-
- A message is a container for anything you want to send to somebody else. There
- are several basic aspects of a message that you should know.
-
- An e-mail message is made up of several relatively simple entities that are
- combined in different ways to achieve different results. All of these entities
- have the same fundamental outline but serve a different purpose. The Message
- itself can be defined as a MIME entity, an Attachment is a MIME entity, all
- MIME parts are MIME entities -- and so on!
-
- The basic units of each MIME entity -- be it the Message itself, or an
- Attachment -- are its Headers and its body:
-
- .. code-block:: text
-
- Header-Name: A header value
- Other-Header: Another value
-
- The body content itself
-
- The Headers of a MIME entity, and its body must conform to some strict
- standards defined by various RFC documents. Swift Mailer ensures that these
- specifications are followed by using various types of object, including
- Encoders and different Header types to generate the entity.
-
- The Structure of a Message
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Of all of the MIME entities, a message -- ``Swift_Message``
- is the largest and most complex. It has many properties that can be updated
- and it can contain other MIME entities -- attachments for example --
- nested inside it.
-
- A Message has a lot of different Headers which are there to present
- information about the message to the recipients' mail client. Most of these
- headers will be familiar to the majority of users, but we'll list the basic
- ones. Although it's possible to work directly with the Headers of a Message
- (or other MIME entity), the standard Headers have accessor methods provided to
- abstract away the complex details for you. For example, although the Date on a
- message is written with a strict format, you only need to pass a UNIX
- timestamp to ``setDate()``.
-
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | Header | Description | Accessors |
- +===============================+====================================================================================================================================+=============================================+
- | ``Message-ID`` | Identifies this message with a unique ID, usually containing the domain name and time generated | ``getId()`` / ``setId()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Return-Path`` | Specifies where bounces should go (Swift Mailer reads this for other uses) | ``getReturnPath()`` / ``setReturnPath()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``From`` | Specifies the address of the person who the message is from. This can be multiple addresses if multiple people wrote the message. | ``getFrom()`` / ``setFrom()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Sender`` | Specifies the address of the person who physically sent the message (higher precedence than ``From:``) | ``getSender()`` / ``setSender()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``To`` | Specifies the addresses of the intended recipients | ``getTo()`` / ``setTo()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Cc`` | Specifies the addresses of recipients who will be copied in on the message | ``getCc()`` / ``setCc()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Bcc`` | Specifies the addresses of recipients who the message will be blind-copied to. Other recipients will not be aware of these copies. | ``getBcc()`` / ``setBcc()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Reply-To`` | Specifies the address where replies are sent to | ``getReplyTo()`` / ``setReplyTo()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Subject`` | Specifies the subject line that is displayed in the recipients' mail client | ``getSubject()`` / ``setSubject()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Date`` | Specifies the date at which the message was sent | ``getDate()`` / ``setDate()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Content-Type`` | Specifies the format of the message (usually text/plain or text/html) | ``getContentType()`` / ``setContentType()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
- | ``Content-Transfer-Encoding`` | Specifies the encoding scheme in the message | ``getEncoder()`` / ``setEncoder()`` |
- +-------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
-
- Working with a Message Object
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Although there are a lot of available methods on a message object, you only
- need to make use of a small subset of them. Usually you'll use
- ``setSubject()``, ``setTo()`` and
- ``setFrom()`` before setting the body of your message with
- ``setBody()``.
-
- Calling methods is simple. You just call them like functions, but using the
- object operator "``<![CDATA[->]]>``" to do so. If you've created
- a message object and called it ``$message`` then you'd set a
- subject on it like so:
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- require_once 'lib/swift_required.php';
-
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance();
- $message->setSubject('My subject');
-
- All MIME entities (including a message) have a ``toString()``
- method that you can call if you want to take a look at what is going to be
- sent. For example, if you ``<![CDATA[echo
- $message->toString();]]>`` you would see something like this:
-
- .. code-block:: bash
-
- Message-ID: <1230173678.4952f5eeb1432@swift.generated>
- Date: Thu, 25 Dec 2008 13:54:38 +1100
- Subject: Example subject
- From: Chris Corbyn <chris@w3style.co.uk>
- To: Receiver Name <recipient@example.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
-
- Here is the message
-
- We'll take a closer look at the methods you use to create your message in the
- following sections.
-
- Adding Content to Your Message
- ------------------------------
-
- Rich content can be added to messages in Swift Mailer with relative ease by
- calling methods such as setSubject(), setBody(), addPart() and attach().
-
- Setting the Subject Line
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The subject line, displayed in the recipients' mail client can be set with the
- setSubject() method, or as a parameter to Swift_Message::newInstance().
-
- To set the subject of your Message:
-
- * Call the ``setSubject()`` method of the Message, or specify it at the time
- you create the message.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- // Pass it as a parameter when you create the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance('My amazing subject');
-
- // Or set it after like this
- $message->setSubject('My amazing subject');
-
- Setting the Body Content
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The body of the message -- seen when the user opens the message --
- is specified by calling the setBody() method. If an alternative body is to be
- included addPart() can be used.
-
- The body of a message is the main part that is read by the user. Often people
- want to send a message in HTML format (``text/html``), other
- times people want to send in plain text (``text/plain``), or
- sometimes people want to send both versions and allow the recipient to chose
- how they view the message.
-
- As a rule of thumb, if you're going to send a HTML email, always include a
- plain-text equivalent of the same content so that users who prefer to read
- plain text can do so.
-
- To set the body of your Message:
-
- * Call the ``setBody()`` method of the Message, or specify it at the time you
- create the message.
-
- * Add any alternative bodies with ``addPart()``.
-
- If the recipient's mail client offers preferences for displaying text vs. HTML then
- the mail client will present that part to the user where available. In other cases
- the mail client will display the "best" part it can - usually HTML if you've included
- HTML.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Pass it as a parameter when you create the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance('Subject here', 'My amazing body');
-
- //Or set it after like this
- $message->setBody('My <em>amazing</em> body', 'text/html');
-
- //Add alternative parts with addPart()
- $message->addPart('My amazing body in plain text', 'text/plain');
-
- Attaching Files
- ---------------
-
- Attachments are downloadable parts of a message and can be added by calling
- the attach() method on the message. You can add attachments that exist on
- disk, or you can create attachments on-the-fly.
-
- Attachments are actually an interesting area of Swift Mailer and something
- that could put a lot of power at your fingertips if you grasp the concept
- behind the way a message is held together.
-
- Although we refer to files sent over e-mails as "attachments" -- because
- they're attached to the message -- lots of other parts of the message are
- actually "attached" even if we don't refer to these parts as attachments.
-
- File attachments are created by the ``Swift_Attachment`` class
- and then attached to the message via the ``attach()`` method on
- it. For all of the "every day" MIME types such as all image formats, word
- documents, PDFs and spreadsheets you don't need to explicitly set the
- content-type of the attachment, though it would do no harm to do so. For less
- common formats you should set the content-type -- which we'll cover in a
- moment.
-
- Attaching Existing Files
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Files that already exist, either on disk or at a URL can be attached to a
- message with just one line of code, using Swift_Attachment::fromPath().
-
- You can attach files that exist locally, or if your PHP installation has
- ``allow_url_fopen`` turned on you can attach files from other
- websites.
-
- To attach an existing file:
-
- * Create an attachment with ``Swift_Attachment::fromPath()``.
-
- * Add the attachment to the message with ``attach()``.
-
- The attachment will be presented to the recipient as a downloadable file with
- the same filename as the one you attached.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Create the attachment
- // * Note that you can technically leave the content-type parameter out
- $attachment = Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg', 'image/jpeg');
-
- //Attach it to the message
- $message->attach($attachment);
-
-
- //The two statements above could be written in one line instead
- $message->attach(Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg'));
-
-
- //You can attach files from a URL if allow_url_fopen is on in php.ini
- $message->attach(Swift_Attachment::fromPath('http://site.tld/logo.png'));
-
- Setting the Filename
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Usually you don't need to explicitly set the filename of an attachment because
- the name of the attached file will be used by default, but if you want to set
- the filename you use the setFilename() method of the Attachment.
-
- To change the filename of an attachment:
-
- * Call its ``setFilename()`` method.
-
- The attachment will be attached in the normal way, but meta-data sent inside
- the email will rename the file to something else.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Create the attachment and call its setFilename() method
- $attachment = Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg')
- ->setFilename('cool.jpg');
-
-
- //Because there's a fluid interface, you can do this in one statement
- $message->attach(
- Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg')->setFilename('cool.jpg')
- );
-
- Attaching Dynamic Content
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Files that are generated at runtime, such as PDF documents or images created
- via GD can be attached directly to a message without writing them out to disk.
- Use the standard Swift_Attachment::newInstance() method.
-
- To attach dynamically created content:
-
- * Create your content as you normally would.
-
- * Create an attachment with ``Swift_Attachment::newInstance()``, specifying
- the source data of your content along with a name and the content-type.
-
- * Add the attachment to the message with ``attach()``.
-
- The attachment will be presented to the recipient as a downloadable file
- with the filename and content-type you specify.
-
- .. note::
-
- If you would usually write the file to disk anyway you should just attach
- it with ``Swift_Attachment::fromPath()`` since this will use less memory:
-
- .. code-block: php
-
- //Create your file contents in the normal way, but don't write them to disk
- $data = create_my_pdf_data();
-
- //Create the attachment with your data
- $attachment = Swift_Attachment::newInstance($data, 'my-file.pdf', 'application/pdf');
-
- //Attach it to the message
- $message->attach($attachment);
-
-
- //You can alternatively use method chaining to build the attachment
- $attachment = Swift_Attachment::newInstance()
- ->setFilename('my-file.pdf')
- ->setContentType('application/pdf')
- ->setBody($data)
- ;
-
- Changing the Disposition
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Attachments just appear as files that can be saved to the Desktop if desired.
- You can make attachment appear inline where possible by using the
- setDisposition() method of an attachment.
-
- To make an attachment appear inline:
-
- * Call its ``setDisposition()`` method.
-
- The attachment will be displayed within the email viewing window if the mail
- client knows how to display it.
-
- .. note::
-
- If you try to create an inline attachment for a non-displayable file type
- such as a ZIP file, the mail client should just present the attachment as
- normal:
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Create the attachment and call its setDisposition() method
- $attachment = Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg')
- ->setDisposition('inline');
-
-
- //Because there's a fluid interface, you can do this in one statement
- $message->attach(
- Swift_Attachment::fromPath('/path/to/image.jpg')->setDisposition('inline')
- );
-
- Embedding Inline Media Files
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Often people want to include an image or other content inline with a HTML
- message. It's easy to do this with HTML linking to remote resources, but this
- approach is usually blocked by mail clients. Swift Mailer allows you to embed
- your media directly into the message.
-
- Mail clients usually block downloads from remote resources because this
- technique was often abused as a mean of tracking who opened an email. If
- you're sending a HTML email and you want to include an image in the message
- another approach you can take is to embed the image directly.
-
- Swift Mailer makes embedding files into messages extremely streamlined. You
- embed a file by calling the ``embed()`` method of the message,
- which returns a value you can use in a ``src`` or
- ``href`` attribute in your HTML.
-
- Just like with attachments, it's possible to embed dynamically generated
- content without having an existing file available.
-
- The embedded files are sent in the email as a special type of attachment that
- has a unique ID used to reference them within your HTML attributes. On mail
- clients that do not support embedded files they may appear as attachments.
-
- Although this is commonly done for images, in theory it will work for any
- displayable (or playable) media type. Support for other media types (such as
- video) is dependent on the mail client however.
-
- Embedding Existing Files
- ........................
-
- Files that already exist, either on disk or at a URL can be embedded in a
- message with just one line of code, using Swift_EmbeddedFile::fromPath().
-
- You can embed files that exist locally, or if your PHP installation has
- ``allow_url_fopen`` turned on you can embed files from other
- websites.
-
- To embed an existing file:
-
- * Create a message object with ``Swift_Message::newInstance()``.
-
- * Set the body as HTML, and embed a file at the correct point in the message with ``embed()``.
-
- The file will be displayed with the message inline with the HTML wherever its ID
- is used as a ``src`` attribute.
-
- .. note::
-
- ``Swift_Image`` and ``Swift_EmbeddedFile`` are just aliases of one
- another. ``Swift_Image`` exists for semantic purposes.
-
- .. note::
-
- You can embed files in two stages if you prefer. Just capture the return
- value of ``embed()`` in a variable and use that as the ``src`` attribute.
-
- .. code-block: php
-
- //Create the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance('My subject');
-
- //Set the body
- $message->setBody(
- '<html>' .
- ' <head></head>' .
- ' <body>' .
- ' Here is an image <img src="' . //Embed the file
- $message->embed(Swift_Image::fromPath('image.png')) .
- '" alt="Image" />' .
- ' Rest of message' .
- ' </body>' .
- '</html>',
- 'text/html' //Mark the content-type as HTML
- );
-
- //You can embed files from a URL if allow_url_fopen is on in php.ini
- $message->setBody(
- '<html>' .
- ' <head></head>' .
- ' <body>' .
- ' Here is an image <img src="' .
- $message->embed(Swift_Image::fromPath('http://site.tld/logo.png')) .
- '" alt="Image" />' .
- ' Rest of message' .
- ' </body>' .
- '</html>',
- 'text/html'
- );
-
-
- // If placing the embed() code inline becomes cumbersome
- // it's easy to do this in two steps
- $cid = $message->embed(Swift_Image::fromPath('image.png'));
-
- $message->setBody(
- '<html>' .
- ' <head></head>' .
- ' <body>' .
- ' Here is an image <img src="' . $cid . '" alt="Image" />' .
- ' Rest of message' .
- ' </body>' .
- '</html>',
- 'text/html' //Mark the content-type as HTML
- );
-
- Embedding Dynamic Content
- .........................
-
- Images that are generated at runtime, such as images created via GD can be
- embedded directly to a message without writing them out to disk. Use the
- standard Swift_Image::newInstance() method.
-
- To embed dynamically created content:
-
- * Create a message object with ``Swift_Message::newInstance()``.
-
- * Set the body as HTML, and embed a file at the correct point in the message
- with ``embed()``. You will need to specify a filename and a content-type.
-
- The file will be displayed with the message inline with the HTML wherever its ID
- is used as a ``src`` attribute.
-
- .. note::
-
- ``Swift_Image`` and ``Swift_EmbeddedFile`` are just aliases of one
- another. ``Swift_Image`` exists for semantic purposes.
-
- .. note::
-
- You can embed files in two stages if you prefer. Just capture the return
- value of ``embed()`` in a variable and use that as the ``src`` attribute.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Create your file contents in the normal way, but don't write them to disk
- $img_data = create_my_image_data();
-
- //Create the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance('My subject');
-
- //Set the body
- $message->setBody(
- '<html>' .
- ' <head></head>' .
- ' <body>' .
- ' Here is an image <img src="' . //Embed the file
- $message->embed(Swift_Image::newInstance($img_data, 'image.jpg', 'image/jpeg')) .
- '" alt="Image" />' .
- ' Rest of message' .
- ' </body>' .
- '</html>',
- 'text/html' //Mark the content-type as HTML
- );
-
-
- // If placing the embed() code inline becomes cumbersome
- // it's easy to do this in two steps
- $cid = $message->embed(Swift_Image::newInstance($img_data, 'image.jpg', 'image/jpeg'));
-
- $message->setBody(
- '<html>' .
- ' <head></head>' .
- ' <body>' .
- ' Here is an image <img src="' . $cid . '" alt="Image" />' .
- ' Rest of message' .
- ' </body>' .
- '</html>',
- 'text/html' //Mark the content-type as HTML
- );
-
- Adding Recipients to Your Message
- ---------------------------------
-
- Recipients are specified within the message itself via setTo(), setCc() and
- setBcc(). Swift Mailer reads these recipients from the message when it gets
- sent so that it knows where to send the message to.
-
- Message recipients are one of three types:
-
- * ``To:`` recipients -- the primary recipients (required)
-
- * ``Cc:`` recipients -- receive a copy of the message (optional)
-
- * ``Bcc:`` recipients -- hidden from other recipients (optional)
-
- Each type can contain one, or several addresses. It's possible to list only
- the addresses of the recipients, or you can personalize the address by
- providing the real name of the recipient.
-
- .. sidebar:: Syntax for Addresses
-
- If you only wish to refer to a single email address (for example your ``From:``
- address) then you can just use a string.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setFrom('some@address.tld');
-
- If you want to include a name then you must use an associative array.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setFrom(array('some@address.tld' => 'The Name'));
-
- If you want to include multiple addresses then you must use an array.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setTo(array('some@address.tld', 'other@address.tld'));
-
- You can mix personalized (addresses with a name) and non-personalized
- addresses in the same list by mixing the use of associative and non-associative
- array syntax.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setTo(array(
- 'recipient-with-name@example.org' => 'Recipient Name One',
- 'no-name@example.org', //Note that this is not a key-value pair
- 'named-recipient@example.org' => 'Recipient Name Two'
- ));
-
- Setting ``To:`` Recipients
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ``To:`` recipients are required in a message and are set with the
- ``setTo()`` or ``addTo()`` methods of the message.
-
- To set ``To:`` recipients, create the message object using either
- ``new Swift_Message( ... )`` or
- ``Swift_Message::newInstance( ... )``, then call the
- ``setTo()`` method with a complete array of addresses, or use the
- ``addTo()`` method to iteratively add recipients.
-
- The ``setTo()`` method accepts input in various formats as described earlier in
- this chapter. The ``addTo()`` method takes either one or two parameters. The
- first being the email address and the second optional parameter being the name
- of the recipient.
-
- ``To:`` recipients are visible in the message headers and will be
- seen by the other recipients.
-
- .. note::
-
- Multiple calls to ``setTo()`` will not add new recipients -- each
- call overrides the previous calls. If you want to iteratively add
- recipients, use the ``addTo()`` method.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Using setTo() to set all recipients in one go
- $message->setTo(array(
- 'person1@example.org',
- 'person2@otherdomain.org' => 'Person 2 Name',
- 'person3@example.org',
- 'person4@example.org',
- 'person5@example.org' => 'Person 5 Name'
- ));
-
- //Using addTo() to add recipients iteratively
- $message->addTo('person1@example.org');
- $message->addTo('person2@example.org', 'Person 2 Name');
-
- Setting ``Cc:`` Recipients
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ``Cc:`` recipients are set with the
- ``setCc()`` or ``addCc()`` methods of the message.
-
- To set ``Cc:`` recipients, create the message object using either
- ``new Swift_Message( ... )`` or
- ``Swift_Message::newInstance( ... )``, then call the
- ``setCc()`` method with a complete array of addresses, or use the
- ``addCc()`` method to iteratively add recipients.
-
- The ``setCc()`` method accepts input in various formats as described earlier in
- this chapter. The ``addCc()`` method takes either one or two parameters. The
- first being the email address and the second optional parameter being the name
- of the recipient.
-
- ``Cc:`` recipients are visible in the message headers and will be
- seen by the other recipients.
-
- .. note::
-
- Multiple calls to ``setCc()`` will not add new recipients -- each
- call overrides the previous calls. If you want to iteratively add Cc:
- recipients, use the ``addCc()`` method.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Using setCc() to set all recipients in one go
- $message->setCc(array(
- 'person1@example.org',
- 'person2@otherdomain.org' => 'Person 2 Name',
- 'person3@example.org',
- 'person4@example.org',
- 'person5@example.org' => 'Person 5 Name'
- ));
-
- //Using addCc() to add recipients iteratively
- $message->addCc('person1@example.org');
- $message->addCc('person2@example.org', 'Person 2 Name');
-
- Setting ``Bcc:`` Recipients
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ``Bcc:`` recipients receive a copy of the message without anybody
- else knowing it, and are set with the ``setBcc()`` or
- ``addBcc`` methods of the message.
-
- To set ``Bcc:`` recipients, create the message object using
- either ``new Swift_Message( ... )`` or
- ``Swift_Message::newInstance( ... )``, then call the
- ``setBcc()`` method with a complete array of addresses, or use
- the ``addBcc()`` method to iteratively add recipients.
-
- The ``setBcc()`` method accepts input in various formats as described earlier in
- this chapter. The ``addBcc()`` method takes either one or two parameters. The
- first being the email address and the second optional parameter being the name
- of the recipient.
-
- Only the individual ``Bcc:`` recipient will see their address in
- the message headers. Other recipients (including other ``Bcc:``
- recipients) will not see the address.
-
- .. note::
-
- Multiple calls to ``setBcc()`` will not add new recipients -- each
- call overrides the previous calls. If you want to iteratively add Bcc:
- recipients, use the ``addBcc()`` method.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Using setBcc() to set all recipients in one go
- $message->setBcc(array(
- 'person1@example.org',
- 'person2@otherdomain.org' => 'Person 2 Name',
- 'person3@example.org',
- 'person4@example.org',
- 'person5@example.org' => 'Person 5 Name'
- ));
-
- //Using addBcc() to add recipients iteratively
- $message->addBcc('person1@example.org');
- $message->addBcc('person2@example.org', 'Person 2 Name');
-
- Specifying Sender Details
- -------------------------
-
- An email must include information about who sent it. Usually this is managed
- by the ``From:`` address, however there are other options.
-
- The sender information is contained in three possible places:
-
- * ``From:`` -- the address(es) of who wrote the message (required)
-
- * ``Sender:`` -- the address of the single person who sent the message
- (optional)
-
- * ``Return-Path:`` -- the address where bounces should go to (optional)
-
- You must always include a ``From:`` address by using
- ``setFrom()`` on the message. Swift Mailer will use this as the
- default ``Return-Path:`` unless otherwise specified.
-
- The ``Sender:`` address exists because the person who actually
- sent the email may not be the person who wrote the email. It has a higher
- precedence than the ``From:`` address and will be used as the
- ``Return-Path:`` unless otherwise specified.
-
- Setting the ``From:`` Address
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- A ``From:`` address is required and is set with the
- ``setFrom()`` method of the message.
-
- ``From:`` addresses specify who actually wrote the email, and
- usually who sent it.
-
- What most people probably don't realise is that you can have more than one
- ``From:`` address if more than one person wrote the email --
- for example if an email was put together by a committee.
-
- To set the ``From:`` address(es):
-
- * Call the ``setFrom()`` method on the Message.
-
- The ``From:`` address(es) are visible in the message headers and
- will be seen by the recipients.
-
- .. note::
-
- If you set multiple ``From:`` addresses then you absolutely must set a
- ``Sender:`` address to indicate who physically sent the message.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Set a single From: address
- $message->setFrom('your@address.tld');
-
- //Set a From: address including a name
- $message->setFrom(array('your@address.tld' => 'Your Name'));
-
- //Set multiple From: addresses if multiple people wrote the email
- $message->setFrom(array(
- 'person1@example.org' => 'Sender One',
- 'person2@example.org' => 'Sender Two'
- ));
-
- Setting the ``Sender:`` Address
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- A ``Sender:`` address specifies who sent the message and is set
- with the ``setSender()`` method of the message.
-
- To set the ``Sender:`` address:
-
- * Call the ``setSender()`` method on the Message.
-
- The ``Sender:`` address is visible in the message headers and
- will be seen by the recipients.
-
- This address will be used as the ``Return-Path:`` unless
- otherwise specified.
-
- .. note::
-
- If you set multiple ``From:`` addresses then you absolutely must set a
- ``Sender:`` address to indicate who physically sent the message.
-
- You must not set more than one sender address on a message because it's not
- possible for more than one person to send a single message.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setSender('your@address.tld');
-
- Setting the ``Return-Path:`` (Bounce) Address
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The ``Return-Path:`` address specifies where bounce notifications should
- be sent and is set with the ``setReturnPath()`` method of the message.
-
- You can only have one ``Return-Path:`` and it must not include
- a personal name.
-
- To set the ``Return-Path:`` address:
-
- * Call the ``setReturnPath()`` method on the Message.
-
- Bouce notifications will be sent to this address.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setReturnPath('bounces@address.tld');
-
- Requesting a Read Receipt
- -------------------------
-
- It is possible to request a read-receipt to be sent to an address when the
- email is opened. To request a read receipt set the address with
- ``setReadReceiptTo()``.
-
- To request a read receipt:
-
- * Set the address you want the receipt to be sent to with the
- ``setReadReceiptTo()`` method on the Message.
-
- When the email is opened, if the mail client supports it a notification will be sent to this address.
-
- .. note::
-
- Read receipts won't work for the majority of recipients since many mail
- clients auto-disable them. Those clients that will send a read receipt
- will make the user aware that one has been requested.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setReadReceiptTo('your@address.tld');
-
- Setting the Character Set
- -------------------------
-
- The character set of the message (and it's MIME parts) is set with the
- setCharset() method. You can also change the global default of UTF-8 by
- working with the Swift_Preferences class.
-
- Swift Mailer will default to the UTF-8 character set unless otherwise
- overridden. UTF-8 will work in most instances since it includes all of the
- standard US keyboard characters in addition to most international characters.
-
- It is absolutely vital however that you know what character set your message
- (or it's MIME parts) are written in otherwise your message may be received
- completely garbled.
-
- There are two places in Swift Mailer where you can change the character set:
-
- * In the Swift_Preferences class
-
- * On each individual message and/or MIME part
-
- To set the character set of your Message:
-
- * Change the global UTF-8 setting by calling
- ``Swift_Preferences::setCharset()``; or
-
- * Call the ``setCharset()`` method on the message or the MIME part.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Approach 1: Change the global setting (suggested)
- Swift_Preferences::getInstance()->setCharset('iso-8859-2');
-
- //Approach 2: Call the setCharset() method of the message
- $message = Swift_Message::newInstance()
- ->setCharset('iso-8859-2');
-
- //Apprach 3: Specify the charset when setting the body
- $message->setBody('My body', 'text/html', 'iso-8859-2');
-
- //Approach 4: Specify the charset for each part added
- $message->addPart('My part', 'text/plain', 'iso-8859-2');
-
- Setting the Line Length
- -----------------------
-
- The length of lines in a message can be changed by using the
- ``setMaxLineLength()`` method on the message. It should be kept
- to less than 1000 characters.
-
- Swift Mailer defaults to using 78 characters per line in a message. This is
- done for historical reasons and so that the message can be easily viewed in
- plain-text terminals.
-
- To change the maximum length of lines in your Message:
-
- * Call the ``setMaxLineLength()`` method on the Message.
-
- Lines that are longer than the line length specified will be wrapped between
- words.
-
- .. note::
-
- You should never set a maximum length longer than 1000 characters
- according to RFC 2822. Doing so could have unspecified side-effects such
- as truncating parts of your message when it is transported between SMTP
- servers.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- $message->setMaxLineLength(1000);
-
- Setting the Message Priority
- ----------------------------
-
- You can change the priority of the message with
- ``setPriority()``. Setting the priority will not change the way
- your email is sent -- it is purely an indicative setting for the
- recipient.
-
- The priority of a message is an indication to the recipient what significance
- it has. Swift Mailer allows you to set the priority by calling the
- ``setPriority`` method. This method takes an integer value
- between 1 and 5:
-
- * Highest
- * High
- * Normal
- * Low
- * Lowest
-
- To set the message priority:
-
- * Set the priority as an integer between 1 and 5 with the ``setPriority()``
- method on the Message.
-
- .. code-block:: php
-
- //Indicate "High" priority
- $message->setPriority(2);
|