ContentType.Name Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets the value of the name parameter included in the Content-Type header represented by this instance.
public:
property System::String ^ Name { System::String ^ get(); void set(System::String ^ value); };
public string Name { get; set; }
member this.Name : string with get, set
Public Property Name As String
Property Value
A String that contains the value associated with the name parameter.
Examples
The following code example sets the value of the property to specify a name for a file being attached as a stream.
// The following example sends a summary of a log file as the message
// and the log as an email attachment.
static void SendNamedErrorLog( String^ server, String^ recipientList )
{
// Create a message from logMailer@contoso.com to recipientList.
MailMessage^ message = gcnew MailMessage( L"logMailer@contoso.com",recipientList );
message->Subject = L"Error Log report";
String^ fileName = L"log.txt";
// Get the file stream for the error log.
// Requires the System.IO namespace.
FileStream^ fs = gcnew FileStream( fileName,FileMode::Open,FileAccess::Read );
StreamReader^ s = gcnew StreamReader( fs );
int errors = 0;
while ( s->ReadLine() != nullptr )
{
// Process each line from the log file here.
errors++;
}
message->Body = String::Format( L"{0} errors in log as of {1}", errors, DateTime::Now );
// Close the stream reader. This also closes the file.
s->Close();
// Re-open the file at the beginning to make the attachment.
fs = gcnew FileStream( fileName,FileMode::Open,FileAccess::Read );
// Make a ContentType indicating that the log data
// that is attached is plain text and is named.
ContentType^ ct = gcnew ContentType;
ct->MediaType = MediaTypeNames::Text::Plain;
ct->Name = String::Format( L"log{0}.txt", DateTime::Now );
// Create the attachment.
Attachment^ data = gcnew Attachment( fs,ct );
// Add the attachment to the message.
message->Attachments->Add( data );
// Send the message.
// Include credentials if the server requires them.
SmtpClient^ client = gcnew SmtpClient( server );
client->Credentials = CredentialCache::DefaultNetworkCredentials;
client->Send( message );
data->~Attachment();
client->~SmtpClient();
// Close the log file.
fs->Close();
return;
}
// The following example sends a summary of a log file as the message
// and the log as an email attachment.
public static void SendNamedErrorLog(string server, string recipientList)
{
// Create a message from logMailer@contoso.com to recipientList.
MailMessage message = new MailMessage(
"logMailer@contoso.com", recipientList);
message.Subject = "Error Log report";
string fileName = "log.txt";
// Get the file stream for the error log.
// Requires the System.IO namespace.
FileStream fs = new FileStream(fileName, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
StreamReader s = new StreamReader(fs);
int errors = 0;
while (s.ReadLine() != null)
{
// Process each line from the log file here.
errors++;
}
// The email message summarizes the data found in the log.
message.Body = String.Format("{0} errors in log as of {1}",
errors, DateTime.Now);
// Close the stream reader. This also closes the file.
s.Close();
// Re-open the file at the beginning to make the attachment.
fs = new FileStream(fileName, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
// Make a ContentType indicating that the log data
// that is attached is plain text and is named.
ContentType ct = new ContentType();
ct.MediaType = MediaTypeNames.Text.Plain;
ct.Name = "log" + DateTime.Now.ToString() + ".txt";
// Create the attachment.
Attachment data = new Attachment(fs, ct);
// Add the attachment to the message.
message.Attachments.Add(data);
// Send the message.
// Include credentials if the server requires them.
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient(server);
client.Credentials = CredentialCache.DefaultNetworkCredentials;
try
{
client.Send(message);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception caught in SendNamedErrorLog: {0}",
ex.ToString());
}
data.Dispose();
// Close the log file.
fs.Close();
return;
}
Remarks
In the following example of a Content-Type header, the value of the Name property is "data.xyz"
.
content-type: application/x-myType; name=data.xyz
A grammar that details the syntax of the Content-Type header is described in RFC 2045 Section 5.1, available at https://www.ietf.org.
When specifying content for a Attachment as a Stream or String, you can use Name to set the name of the file that stores the content on the recipient's system.