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For a remote file, you can use the http protocol e.g.
http://www.mysite.com/somefolder/attachments/INV2019-246.pdf or
http://localhost:8080/pod/v1/deliverynotes/{8FCEC8BC-72E8-486B-A206-
516BF10E21F6}.
Note
For attachment names, it is recommended to use only US-ASCII characters. Other
characters may not be supported by all email servers and clients.
Note
Certain characters are invalid in a URL (for example, '$', '%', and '&') and must be
percent-encoded. The same applies to a file path, since that actually is a URL that
starts with the file protocol.
Note that even a space character is invalid in a URL. Spaces in a URL are
supported for backward compatibility, but it is recommended to percent-encode a
space character as %20.
5. The attachment's name in the email will be the part of the path that comes after the last '/'.
When there are no forward slashes in the path, the full path is used.
You may want to use a custom attachment name. To learn how to do that, see "Renaming
attachments" below.
6. Click OK or Apply to save your changes.
Note that an Attachments script creates one single attachment. To add more attachments, you
could either add Attachments scripts, or click the Expand button and edit the script.
If you want to write your own email attachment scripts, there is a how-to that you may find
helpful: How to add custom email attachments.
Renaming attachments
Print and Web sections that are attached to an email can only be renamed via a Control Script;
see "Parts: splitting and renaming email attachments" on page909.
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