Thanks for getting back to me on this. Yes, I did include the -b and a series of addresses separated by commas. If you can give me an example of how the syntax of a typical message would look that would be useful. Maybe there are parentheses or brackets or something else I missed in there, but I think I did it right, i.e.:
Regards,
Gary
No. A comma separated list has a comma between entries in the list; not a comma and a space.
Try:
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
I am trying to use a file containing email addresses in my mailx command like the following:
SUBJECT="Kronos User Report"
BODY="kronos.txt"
MAILTO="kronosmail.txt"
mailx -s "$SUBJECT" $MAILTO < $BODY
This works fine for the body of the message but for the recipient it says:
... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I am using mailx command to send a mail with attachment. It's working fine, but with attachment I am getting one extra attachment like (ATT00131.txt). I have tried to use unix2dos command also. But still I am getting the extra attachment.
I am using the following code:
subject="temp... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
Can you please help me in solving this. I am facing some problem sending mails.
If I use like this, I am able to send mail the mail
echo "This is an automated e-mail; please do not reply." | mailx -s "Good Morning ." 'abc@xys.com'
But if I use like this, then I am unable to send... (1 Reply)
I have a need to send a file from the unix command line to be sent as an attachment. Is this possible? That is when I open my outlook email I need to file to appear as an attachment.
Also, is there a way to use the mail binary (not mailx) to modify the "reply address". mailx -r works but I need... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Our requirement is to send an attachment and content in a single mail. I am using the below command to send attachement.
---------------------
(uuencode $exp_file $exp_file) |mailx -s "$email_subject" $EmailRecipients
--------------------
I m not able to send any message in the... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am using solaris 5.9 OS and I am facing an issues with mailx.
My SMTP port is configured to listen 6190 and not the default one which is 25. I can send mail to my inbox when i do it manually through the following steps
root@<dbname> # telnet 15.12.88.10 6190
Trying 15.12.88.10...... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I am using mailx to send the mail. Due to some changes in the requirement, I need to send the mail to CC only (an Email id in CC), with no email ID in "TO" field. Can we do that? bcz I used -c flag only and got the message:":The flags you gave make no sense since you're not sending... (2 Replies)
I have to send a couple of rows that have been returned from a SQL query. I have written the output of the query to a file and while i try to print this in the mail body the formatting goes wrong.
Intended Output in mail body:
Col1 Col2 Col3
------ ... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to send a mail from linux server but could'nt able to send the mail.
I tried the below syntax's so far but no luck.
mail -s “Hello world” abc@xyz.com < /usr/g/txt.log
cat "txt.log" | mailx -s "Hello world" abc@xyz.com
mailx -s “Hello world” abc@xyz.com <... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: scriptscript
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
funcombine
funcombine(7) SAORD Documentation funcombine(7)NAME
FunCombine - Combining Region and Table Filters
SYNOPSIS
This document discusses the conventions for combining region and table filters, especially with regards to the comma operator.
DESCRIPTION
Comma Conventions
Filter specifications consist of a series of boolean expressions, separated by commas. These expressions can be table filters, spatial
region filters, or combinations thereof. Unfortunately, common usage requires that the comma operator must act differently in different
situations. Therefore, while its use is intuitive in most cases, commas can be a source of confusion.
According to long-standing usage in IRAF, when a comma separates two table filters, it takes on the meaning of a boolean and. Thus:
foo.fits[pha==1,pi==2]
is equivalent to:
foo.fits[pha==1 && pi==2]
When a comma separates two spatial region filters, however, it has traditionally taken on the meaning of a boolean or. Thus:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
is equivalent to:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3) || ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
(except that in the former case, each region is given a unique id in programs such as funcnts).
Region and table filters can be combined:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),pi=1:5]
or even:
foo.fits[pha==1&&circle(10,10,3),pi==2&&ellipse(20,20,8,5)]
In these cases, it is not obvious whether the command should utilize an or or and operator. We therefore arbitrarily chose to implement the
following rule:
o if both expressions contain a region, the operator used is or.
o if one (or both) expression(s) does not contain a region, the operator used is and.
This rule handles the cases of pure regions and pure column filters properly. It unambiguously assigns the boolean and to all mixed cases.
Thus:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3),pi=1:5]
and
foo.fits[pi=1:5,circle(10,10,3)]
both are equivalent to:
foo.fits[circle(10,10,3) && pi=1:5]
[NB: This arbitrary rule replaces the previous arbitrary rule (pre-funtools 1.2.3) which stated:
o if the 2nd expression contains a region, the operator used is or.
o if the 2nd expression does not contain a region, the operator used is and.
In that scenario, the or operator was implied by:
pha==4,circle 5 5 1
while the and operator was implied by
circle 5 5 1,pha==4
Experience showed that this non-commutative treatment of the comma operator was confusing and led to unexpected results.]
The comma rule must be considered provisional: comments and complaints are welcome to help clarify the matter. Better still, we recommend
that the comma operator be avoided in such cases in favor of an explicit boolean operator.
SEE ALSO
See funtools(7) for a list of Funtools help pages
version 1.4.2 January 2, 2008 funcombine(7)