Sometimes you don't want to have your application exposed to an unconstrained wait outside of your control. Sometimes your application may not have access/permissions/etc. to open sockets. (This is actually a common security precaution in some CGI environments). Owen On Mar 12, 2012, at 4:22 PM, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
Owen DeLong wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_address#Valid_email_addresses You may have noticed my particular test wouldn't accept foo!bar!ucbvax!user format addresses, either. It works well enough for my purposes. I did not claim it was perfect.
Why not leave it to the MTA to decide what is a valid address? It only requires a few SMTP commands to the MTA to know if it will accept it. Normally the MTA will tell you after the "rcpt to:" command if it will accept it (i'm ignoring some badly behaving MTAs who will swallow anything and then bounce, no point trying to work around such crap).
No need to re-invent the wheel, unless you're actually creating an MTA or something similar.
Who is to say that even IF your address verifier verifies it as valid that the MTA is configured to allow it (or the other way around)? MTAs can be arbitrarily configured to (dis)allow "bang path" addresses, IP addresses etc.
Regards, Jeroen
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