Currently, to avoid errors from being thrown up due to invalid email addresses, I do the following:
Dim mailAddress As MailAddress开发者_JS百科
Try
mailAddress = New MailAddress("testing@invalid@email.com")
Catch ex As Exception
'Invalid email
End Try
However, rather than depending on Try..Catch
, is there a way of validating that the email address will be 100% valid for the MailAddress
type?
I know there a plenty of regex functions out there for validating emails, but I'm looking for the function which the MailAddress
type uses to validate its addresses.
Unfortunately, there is no MailAddress.TryParse
method.
Your code is the ideal way to validate email addresses in .Net.
Recently the .NET API was extended with a MailAddress.TryCreate method, probably coming in future releases, which will eliminate the need for the common try-catch boilerplate: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/commit/aea45f4e75d1cdbbfc60daae782d1cfeb700be02
If you need to make sure a given email address is valid according to the IETF standards - which the MailAddress
class seems to follow only partially, at the time of this writing - I suggest you to take a look at EmailVerify.NET, a .NET component you can easily integrate in your solutions. It does not depend on regular expressions to perform its job but it relies on an internal finite state machine, so it is very very fast.
- Website
- Online demo
Disclaimer: I am the lead developer of this component.
Not really an answer to this question per se, but in case anyone needs it, I wrote a C# function for validating email addresses using this method.
FixEmailAddress("walter@xyz.com")
returns "walter@xyz.com"
FixEmailAddress("wa@lter@xyz.com,tom@xyz.com,asdfdsf,vsav-sdfsd@xyz.xyz")
returns "tom@xyz.com,vsav-sdfsd@xyz.xyz"
I process lists of email addresses this way because a comma separated list of emails is a valid parameter for MailAddressCollection.Add()
/// <summary>
/// Given a single email address, return the email address if it is valid, or empty string if invalid.
/// or given a comma delimited list of email addresses, return the a comma list of valid email addresses from the original list.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="emailAddess"></param>
/// <returns>Validated email address(es)</returns>
public static string FixEmailAddress(string emailAddress)
{
string result = "";
emailAddress = emailAddress.Replace(";",",");
if (emailAddress.Contains(","))
{
List<string> results = new List<string>();
string[] emailAddresses = emailAddress.Split(new char[] { ',' });
foreach (string e in emailAddresses)
{
string temp = FixEmailAddress(e);
if (temp != "")
{
results.Add(temp);
}
}
result = string.Join(",", results);
}
else
{
try
{
System.Net.Mail.MailAddress email = new System.Net.Mail.MailAddress(emailAddress);
result = email.Address;
}
catch (Exception)
{
result = "";
}
}
return result;
}
MS also provide the code for a regex based email validator: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/01escwtf%28v=vs.110%29.aspx?f=255&MSPPError=-2147217396
Some characters are valid in some service providers but the same is not in others! The SmtpClient
don't know anything about the service providers. So it has to filter as least as possible. The Wikipedia is welly mentioned about the standers.
Validation of MailAddress
is mentioned on the MSDN. Hence I think you can check for those validations before initializing the MailAddress
.
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