6 Respuestas
+ 1
well is the 'subject' in the body, or in its own box ?
+ 1
Al Swiegert wrote a great tutorial on it. you should check it out
https://automatetheboringstuff.com/chapter16/
Try this:
import smtplib
smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('smtp.gmail.com', 587)
smtpObj.ehlo()
smtpObj.starttls()
smtpObj.login('YOURADDRESS@GMAIL.COM', 'SUPERSECRETPASSWORD')
smtpObj.sendmail('YOURADDRESS@GMAIL.COM', 'THEIRADDRESS@GMAIL.COM', 'Subject: So long.\nDear Alice, so long and thanks for all the fish. Sincerely, Bob')
Yes, the "Subject" is part of the "Body", if it is not specified like above, the subject line will be left blank and only the body will contain text. The newline character separates the subject from the main body.
NOTE: If you are still having trouble, try changing your port to 465 instead of 587.
Best of luck!
0
smtpObj.sendmail('you@gmail.com ', 'them@gmail.com', 'Subject: How to add a Subject.\n Carson, the \\n separates the "Subject" line from the "Body".')
something like this?
0
Maybe something like this?
==================
# Send an HTML email with an embedded image and a plain text message for
# email clients that don't want to display the HTML.
from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart
from email.mime.text import MIMEText
from email.mime.image import MIMEImage
# Define these once; use them twice!
strFrom = 'FROM@gmail.com'
strTo = 'TO@yahoo.com.mx'
# Create the root message and fill in the from, to, and subject headers
msgRoot = MIMEMultipart('related')
msgRoot['Subject'] = 'test message'
msgRoot['From'] = strFrom
msgRoot['To'] = strTo
msgRoot.preamble = 'This is a multi-part message in MIME format.'
# Encapsulate the plain and HTML versions of the message body in an
# 'alternative' part, so message agents can decide which they want to display.
msgAlternative = MIMEMultipart('alternative')
msgRoot.attach(msgAlternative)
msgText = MIMEText('This is the alternative plain text message.')
msgAlternative.attach(msgText)
# We reference the image in the IMG SRC attribute by the ID we give it below
msgText = MIMEText('<b>Some <i>HTML</i> text</b> and an image.<br><img src="cid:image1"><br>Nifty!', 'html')
msgAlternative.attach(msgText)
# This example assumes the image is in the current directory
fp = open('Green Apple.gif', 'rb')
msgImage = MIMEImage(fp.read())
fp.close()
# Define the image's ID as referenced above
msgImage.add_header('Content-ID', '<image1>')
msgRoot.attach(msgImage)
# Send the email (this example assumes SMTP authentication is required)
import smtplib
smtp = smtplib.SMTP('smtp.gmail.com: 587')
smtp.starttls()
smtp.login('USERAUTH@gmail.com', 'PASSWORD')
smtp.sendmail(strFrom, strTo, msgRoot.as_string())
smtp.quit()
0
im afraid that will not work
0
Just, IS there any way to have the subject outside the body ?