##Breaking API changes in 3.0.0!
Use new SendGridMessage()
instead of SendGrid.GetInstance()
and new Web()
instead of Web.GetInstance()
#Requirements
As of 4.0.0, this library requires .NET 4.5 and above. If you need .NET 4.0 support, Install-Package sendgri -V 3.0.2
#Installation
To use SendGrid in your C# project, you can either download the SendGrid C# .NET libraries directly from our Github repository or, if you have the NuGet package manager installed, you can grab them automatically.
PM> Install-Package SendGrid
Once you have the SendGrid libraries properly referenced in your project, you can include calls to them in your code. For a sample implementation, check the Example folder.
Add the following namespaces to use the library:
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.Mail;
using SendGrid;
#How to: Create an email
Use the static new SendGridMessage constructor to create an email message that is of type SendGridMessage. Once the message is created, you can use SendGridMessage properties and methods to set values including the email sender, the email recipient, and the subject and body of the email.
The following example demonstrates how to create an email object and populate it:
// Create the email object first, then add the properties.
var myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
// Add the message properties.
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com");
// Add multiple addresses to the To field.
List<String> recipients = new List<String>
{
@"Jeff Smith <jeff@example.com>",
@"Anna Lidman <anna@example.com>",
@"Peter Saddow <peter@example.com>"
};
myMessage.AddTo(recipients);
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
//Add the HTML and Text bodies
myMessage.Html = "<p>Hello World!</p>";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World plain text!";
#How to: Send an Email
After creating an email message, you can send it using the Web API provided by SendGrid.
Sending email requires that you supply your SendGrid account credentials (username and password). The following code demonstrates how to wrap your credentials in a NetworkCredential object:
// Create network credentials to access your SendGrid account.
var username = "your_sendgrid_username";
var pswd = "your_sendgrid_password";
var credentials = new NetworkCredential(username, pswd);
To send an email message, use the Deliver method on the Web transport class, which calls the SendGrid Web API. The following example shows how to send a message.
// Create the email object first, then add the properties.
SendGridMessage myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
myMessage.AddTo("anna@example.com");
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com", "John Smith");
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World!";
// Create credentials, specifying your user name and password.
var credentials = new NetworkCredential("username", "password");
// Create an Web transport for sending email.
var transportWeb = new Web(credentials);
// Send the email.
transportWeb.Deliver(myMessage);
You can also use the DeliverAsync method, which returns an awaitable task.
#How to: Add an Attachment
Attachments can be added to a message by calling the AddAttachment method and specifying the name and path of the file you want to attach, or by passing a stream. You can include multiple attachments by calling this method once for each file you wish to attach. The following example demonstrates adding an attachment to a message:
SendGridMessage myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
myMessage.AddTo("anna@example.com");
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com", "John Smith");
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World!";
myMessage.AddAttachment(@"C:\file1.txt");
You can also add attachments from the data's Stream. It can be done by calling the same method as above, AddAttachment, but by passing in the Stream of the data, and the filename you want it to show as in the message.
SendGridMessage myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
myMessage.AddTo("anna@example.com");
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com", "John Smith");
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World!";
using (var attachmentFileStream = new FileStream(@"C:\file.txt", FileMode.Open))
{
message.AddAttachment(attachmentFileStream, "My Cool File.txt");
}
#How to: Use filters to enable footers, tracking, and analytics
SendGrid provides additional email functionality through the use of filters. These are settings that can be added to an email message to enable specific functionality such as click tracking, Google analytics, subscription tracking, and so on. For a full list of filters, see Filter Settings.
Filters can be applied to SendGrid email messages using methods implemented as part of the SendGrid class. Before you can enable filters on an email message, you must first initialize the list of available filters by calling the InitializeFilters method.
The following examples demonstrate the footer and click tracking filters:
##Footer
// Create the email object first, then add the properties.
SendGridMessage myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
myMessage.AddTo("anna@example.com");
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com", "John Smith");
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World!";
// Add a footer to the message.
myMessage.EnableFooter("PLAIN TEXT FOOTER", "<p><em>HTML FOOTER</em></p>");
##Click tracking
// Create the email object first, then add the properties.
SendGridMessage myMessage = new SendGridMessage();
myMessage.AddTo("anna@example.com");
myMessage.From = new MailAddress("john@example.com", "John Smith");
myMessage.Subject = "Testing the SendGrid Library";
myMessage.Html = "<p><a href=\"http://www.example.com\">Hello World Link!</a></p>";
myMessage.Text = "Hello World!";
// true indicates that links in plain text portions of the email
// should also be overwritten for link tracking purposes.
myMessage.EnableClickTracking(true);
This readme adapted from How to Send Email Using SendGrid with Windows Azure