No problem. > If you have no control over the client...
Yeah, that is why I went with a message ID number in the body and instructions in the user manual stating the replay must contain the unaltered message id line. Thanks for all your help. On 10/20/2008 7:03:54 AM, DZ-Jay ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > I'm sorry, I think I mispoke. I was actually thinking of SMTP > server-to-server communication, which preserves headers; I'm > not sure > clietns would do that. As a matter of fact, I have a suspicion they > don't. I'd try it anyway, just in case. > > However, the problem you have is not having control over the client; > this is crucial. If you have no control over the client, you cannot > guarantee that a response or reply will contain any of the information > you originally included in your message--headers or content. > > dZ. > > On Oct 20, 2008, at 05:41, DZ-Jay wrote: > > > > > On Oct 19, 2008, at 08:09, zayin wrote: > >> The person receiving the alarm will just need to reply to the email. > > > > If you include an X-Header when you send the message, the client will > > probably include it when replying, this is standard behaviour in most > > clients. > > > >> So, it appears I might need to embed a unique string in the body of > >> the > >> message and use that to determine the responder. > > > > Use an X-Header. Perform some tests: send a message with a new > > X-Header and reply from your mail client and see if it's there. This > > may b -- To unsubscribe or change your settings for TWSocket mailing list please goto http://lists.elists.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/twsocket Visit our website at http://www.overbyte.be