Email Quick Assist


 
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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) OS X Support RSS Email Quick Assist
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Old 10-13-2008
Email Quick Assist

Email is one of the quickest, most convenient, and inexpensive ways of staying in touch with friends and family. Mac OS X makes it easy to send and receive email with a built-in email application called Mail. All you need is access to the Internet and an email account which is usually provided with your Internet account or you can even sign up for a .Mac trial account and get an @mac.com email.The first time you open Mail (by clicking the postage stamp icon in the Dock), your Mac automatically sets up an email account for you using the information in the .Mac pane of System Preferences. If you don't have a .Mac account (or haven't entered that information yet), Mail Setup Assistant opens to guide you through the process of setting up a new account—just enter the information provided by your Internet provider and you can create additional email accounts at any time.Once you've got your account set up, you're ready to send and receive email—we show you how to do both below. And if you're having difficulty sending or receiving email, we've got 10 things for you to try that'll help get you back in touch with the world again.

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Email::Sender::Transport::Test(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation		       Email::Sender::Transport::Test(3pm)

NAME
Email::Sender::Transport::Test - deliver mail in memory for testing VERSION
version 0.110005 DESCRIPTION
This transport is meant for testing email deliveries in memory. It will store a record of any delivery made so that they can be inspected afterward. ATTRIBUTES
deliveries By default, the Test transport will not allow partial success and will always succeed. It can be made to fail predictably, however, if it is extended and its "recipient_failure" or "delivery_failure" methods are overridden. These methods are called as follows: $self->delivery_failure($email, $envelope); $self->recipient_failure($to); If they return true, the sending will fail. If the transport was created with a true "allow_partial_success" attribute, recipient failures can cause partial success to be returned. For more flexible failure modes, you can override more aggressively or can use Email::Sender::Transport::Failable. This attribute stores an arrayref of all the deliveries made via the transport. It can be emptied by calling "clear_deliveries". Each delivery is a hashref, in the following format: { email => $email, envelope => $envelope, successes => @ok_rcpts, failures => @failures, } Both successful and failed deliveries are stored. AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-03-06 Email::Sender::Transport::Test(3pm)