ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

Send Email Intent

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("text/html");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, "emailaddress@emailaddress.com");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Subject");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "I'm email body.");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Send Email"));

The above code opens a dialog showing the following apps:- Bluetooth, Google Docs, Yahoo Mail, Gmail, Orkut, Skype, etc.

Actually, I want to filter these list options. I want to show only email-related apps e.g. Gmail, and Yahoo Mail. How to do it?

I've seen such an example on the 'Android Market application.

Open the Android Market app Open any application where the developer has specified his/her email address. (If you can't find such an app just open my app:- market://details?id=com.becomputer06.vehicle.diary.free, OR search by 'Vehicle Diary') Scroll down to 'DEVELOPER' Click on 'Send Email'

The dialog shows only email Apps e.g. Gmail, Yahoo Mail, etc. It does not show Bluetooth, Orkut, etc. What code produces such dialog?

Sorry, this is not possible with Intent.ACTION_SEND. Maybe it works with an intent directly to the gmail-App but I don't know if this is possible.
In case anyone happens to learn here about email intents, EXTRA_MAIL should correspond to a String[], not just a String as shown here.
possible duplicate of Send email via gmail
See here for some good advice: medium.com/@cketti/…

t
thanhbinh84

UPDATE

Official approach:

public void composeEmail(String[] addresses, String subject) {
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
    intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")); // only email apps should handle this
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, addresses);
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
    if (intent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
        startActivity(intent);
    }
}

Ref link

OLD ANSWER

The accepted answer doesn't work on the 4.1.2. This should work on all platforms:

Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, Uri.fromParts(
            "mailto","abc@gmail.com", null));
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Subject");
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "Body");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send email..."));

Update: According to marcwjj, it seems that on 4.3, we need to pass string array instead of a string for email address to make it work. We might need to add one more line:

intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, addresses); // String[] addresses

You are right, and it doesn't either on 4.2. So this is actually the only correct answer, thanks!
This is perfect. Someone below mentioned that specifying the "mailto" part is what narrows the available options to email clients. Using Uri.fromParts("mailto", "", null) will put the cursor in the recipient field - perfect for what I needed.
Try this emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "I'm email body.");
If you don't have a specific recipient, this also works: Uri.fromParts("mailto", "", null)
This does not work on my Android 4.3 any more. Please check out the official Android doc on sending email as intent, which works perfectly: developer.android.com/guide/components/…
z
zOqvxf

There are three main approaches:

String email = /* Your email address here */
String subject = /* Your subject here */
String body = /* Your body here */
String chooserTitle = /* Your chooser title here */

1. Custom Uri:

Uri uri = Uri.parse("mailto:" + email)
    .buildUpon()
    .appendQueryParameter("subject", subject)
    .appendQueryParameter("body", body)
    .build();

Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, uri);
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, chooserTitle));

2. Using Intent extras:

Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, Uri.parse("mailto:" + email));
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, body);
//emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_HTML_TEXT, body); //If you are using HTML in your body text

startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Chooser Title"));

3. Support Library ShareCompat:

Activity activity = /* Your activity here */

ShareCompat.IntentBuilder.from(activity)
    .setType("message/rfc822")
    .addEmailTo(email)
    .setSubject(subject)
    .setText(body)
    //.setHtmlText(body) //If you are using HTML in your body text
    .setChooserTitle(chooserTitle)
    .startChooser();

This worked much better for me - the other options popped up some straight things (Skype, for example) as possible handlers.
If you have a % symbol in the buffer, some characters in the resulting email won't be correctly encoded. You need to perform the Uri.encode dance suggested by @minipif.
This are the best answers here, don't waste your time trying others, the second one here is what i chose and it works perfectly, only showing the pure email apps, not gDrive, not bluetooth.. etc. Thanks @becomputer06
ShareCompat results in almost all the apps, not just email clients!
3rd option with .setType("message/rfc822") gives me too much irrelevant options in Chooser dialog (Android 8.1). The good old Intent.ACTION_SENDTO approach works best!
S
Salil Pandit

when you will change your intent.setType like below you will get

intent.setType("text/plain");

Use android.content.Intent.ACTION_SENDTO to get only the list of e-mail clients, with no facebook or other apps. Just the email clients. Ex:

new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);

I wouldn't suggest you get directly to the email app. Let the user choose his favorite email app. Don't constrain him.

If you use ACTION_SENDTO, putExtra does not work to add subject and text to the intent. Use Uri to add the subject and body text.

EDIT: We can use message/rfc822 instead of "text/plain" as the MIME type. However, that is not indicating "only offer email clients" -- it indicates "offer anything that supports message/rfc822 data". That could readily include some application that are not email clients.

message/rfc822 supports MIME Types of .mhtml, .mht, .mime


Can you please provide some code to produce the desired output?
The intent chooser says no apps installed to perform this intent when I use ACTION_SENDTO. I'm using Android 4.1.2 and I have an email app installed...
The 'correct' way is the answer from Magnus. I recommend original poster to change the accepted answer.
Using the MIME type to perform a send operation is a bad idea, because you're basically instructing Android to provide a list of apps that support sending a file of type message/rfc822. That's not the same as sending an e-mail. Use the mailto: protocol instead, because that's what e-mail clients actually understand.
Z
Ziem

This is quoted from Android official doc, I've tested it on Android 4.4, and works perfectly. See more examples at https://developer.android.com/guide/components/intents-common.html#Email

public void composeEmail(String[] addresses, String subject) {
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
    intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")); // only email apps should handle this
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, addresses);
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
    if (intent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
        startActivity(intent);
    }
}

Agreed! I'm surprised an answer like this is so far down the list. I guess it must have been a relatively recent change in the Android Docs.
Great! dependable one, it referred the 'Bible' of Android app developers.
The colon after mailto did the trick for me! I was using "mailto" instead of "mailto:"
Working on 5.1.1. The other options doesn't work for me.
EXTRA_EMAIL not working for me so I used Uri.parse("mailto: " + myEmail)
C
Community

A late answer, although I figured out a solution which could help others:

Java version

Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
emailIntent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:abc@xyz.com"));
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send feedback"));

Kotlin version

val emailIntent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO).apply { 
    data = Uri.parse("mailto:abc@xyz.com")
}
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send feedback"))

This was my output (only Gmail + Inbox suggested):

https://i.stack.imgur.com/js4Kw.png

I got this solution from the Android Developers site.


For me it was important that there is no space between mailto and the email: mailto:abc@xyz.com
Great Solution , i had the same requirement, thanks a lot.!!!!
Excellent solution. Would you be great if you could show how to add Subject and Body as well.
A
Adil Hussain

This works for me:

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:"));
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL  , new String[] { "me@somewhere.com" });
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "My subject");

startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Email via..."));

i.e. use the ACTION_SENDTO action rather than the ACTION_SEND action. I've tried it on a couple of Android 4.4 devices and it limits the chooser pop-up to only display email applications (Email, Gmail, Yahoo Mail etc) and it correctly inserts the email address and subject into the email.


M
Magnus

Try:

intent.setType("message/rfc822");

He's right, I tried it and offers [Drive, Email, Gmail, Skype], this should be the "Right answer"
Using the MIME type to perform a send operation is a bad idea, because you're basically instructing Android to provide a list of apps that support sending a file of type message/rfc822. That's not the same as sending an e-mail. Use the mailto: protocol instead, because that's what e-mail clients actually understand.
A
A P

This is the proper way to send the e-mail intent according to the Android Developer Official Documentation

Add these lines of code to your app:

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);//common intent 
intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")); // only email apps should handle this

Optional: Add the body and subject, like this

intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Your Subject Here");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "E-mail body" );

You already added this line in your question

intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[]{"hello@example.com"});

This will be the recipient's address, meaning the user will send you (the developer) an e-mail.


@barnacle.m Thank you! It's also one of the more simple methods. The problem is that my answer doesn't get enough upvotes :(
It's because there's a lot of similar answers, but this one points out the official Android documentation on the matter.
I was unable to send email address. I fixed it like this intent.data = Uri.parse("mailto:somemail@xyz.com")
This didn't work until I changed Intent.ACTION_SEND to Intent.ACTION_SENDTO.
I always forget that the 'Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL' value needs to be an Array, otherwise it will not populate the "To" field in the mail client (at least the Gmail App client anyway, haven't tested others)
R
Rahul Gaur

Finally come up with best way to do

String to = "test@gmail.com";
String subject= "Hi I am subject";
String body="Hi I am test body";
String mailTo = "mailto:" + to +
        "?&subject=" + Uri.encode(subject) +
        "&body=" + Uri.encode(body);
Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
emailIntent.setData(Uri.parse(mailTo));
startActivity(emailIntent);

This is the only answer that worked out of all to get: To, From, Subject, Body.
A
Addev

If you want only the email clients you should use android.content.Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL with an array. Here goes an example:

final Intent result = new Intent(android.content.Intent.ACTION_SEND);
result.setType("plain/text");
result.putExtra(android.content.Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[] { recipient });
result.putExtra(android.content.Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
result.putExtra(android.content.Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, body);

nope, Still brings up lots of other apps - a lot more than ACTION_SENDTO
a
afollestad

Works on all android Versions:

String[] to = {"email@server.com"};
Uri uri = Uri.parse("mailto:email@server.com")
  .buildUpon()
  .appendQueryParameter("subject", "subject")
  .appendQueryParameter("body", "body")
  .build();
Intent emailIntent = new Intent(ACTION_SENDTO, uri);
emailIntent.putExtra(EXTRA_EMAIL, TO);
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send mail..."));

Updated for Android 10, now using Kotlin...

fun Context.sendEmail(
  address: String?,
  subject: String?,
  body: String?,
) {
  val recipients = arrayOf(address)
  val uri = address.toUri()
    .buildUpon()
    .appendQueryParameter("subject", subject)
    .appendQueryParameter("body", body)
    .build()
  val emailIntent = Intent(ACTION_SENDTO, uri).apply {
    setData("mailto:$address".toUri());
    putExtra(EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
    putExtra(EXTRA_TEXT, body);
    putExtra(EXTRA_EMAIL, recipients)
  }
  val pickerTitle = getString(R.string.some_title)
  ContextCompat.startActivity(this, Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, pickerTitle, null)
}

...after updating to API 30, the code did not fill the subject and body of the email client (e.g Gmail). But I found an answer here:

fun Context.sendEmail(
  address: String?,
  subject: String?,
  body: String?,
) {
  val selectorIntent = Intent(ACTION_SENDTO)
    .setData("mailto:$address".toUri())
  val emailIntent = Intent(ACTION_SEND).apply {
    putExtra(EXTRA_EMAIL, arrayOf(address))
    putExtra(EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject)
    putExtra(EXTRA_TEXT, body)
    selector = selectorIntent
  }
  startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, getString(R.string.send_email))) 

}

Your answer helped me. Thanks
the damn mail is not accepted / empty from gmail in the java version.
dont use java version that is outdated. added new to support all android versions.
A
Anam Ansari

The following code works for me fine.

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("message/rfc822");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[]{"abc@gmailcom"});
Intent mailer = Intent.createChooser(intent, null);
startActivity(mailer);

m
minipif

Edit: Not working anymore with new versions of Gmail

This was the only way I found at the time to get it to work with any characters.

doreamon's answer is the correct way to go now, as it works with all characters in new versions of Gmail.

Old answer:

Here is mine. It seems to works on all Android versions, with subject and message body support, and full utf-8 characters support:

public static void email(Context context, String to, String subject, String body) {
    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder("mailto:" + Uri.encode(to));
    if (subject != null) {
        builder.append("?subject=" + Uri.encode(Uri.encode(subject)));
        if (body != null) {
            builder.append("&body=" + Uri.encode(Uri.encode(body)));
        }
    }
    String uri = builder.toString();
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, Uri.parse(uri));
    context.startActivity(intent);
}

+1 Uri.encode is the correct way to go. But why calling it two times for subject and body?
So, doing the encoding yourself is just a bad idea. Better use a proper Intent with the necessary extras, see e.g. stackoverflow.com/a/15022222
For me this is the best answer because other solutions work correctly only with some of the email apps. This one works with every email app that I tested.
s
scottt

None of these solutions were working for me. Here's a minimal solution that works on Lollipop. On my device, only Gmail and the native email apps appear in the resulting chooser list.

Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO,
                                Uri.parse("mailto:" + Uri.encode(address)));

emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
emailIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, body);
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send email via..."));

m
marvatron

From Android developers docs:

public void composeEmail(String[] addresses, String subject) {
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
    intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")); // only email apps should handle this
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, addresses);
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
    if (intent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
        startActivity(intent);
    }
}

D
David Vávra

Most of these answers work only for a simple case when you are not sending attachment. In my case I need sometimes to send attachment (ACTION_SEND) or two attachments (ACTION_SEND_MULTIPLE).

So I took best approaches from this thread and combined them. It's using support library's ShareCompat.IntentBuilder but I show only apps which match the ACTION_SENDTO with "mailto:" uri. This way I get only list of email apps with attachment support:

fun Activity.sendEmail(recipients: List<String>, subject: String, file: Uri, text: String? = null, secondFile: Uri? = null) {
    val originalIntent = createEmailShareIntent(recipients, subject, file, text, secondFile)
    val emailFilterIntent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, Uri.parse("mailto:"))
    val originalIntentResults = packageManager.queryIntentActivities(originalIntent, 0)
    val emailFilterIntentResults = packageManager.queryIntentActivities(emailFilterIntent, 0)
    val targetedIntents = originalIntentResults
            .filter { originalResult -> emailFilterIntentResults.any { originalResult.activityInfo.packageName == it.activityInfo.packageName } }
            .map {
                createEmailShareIntent(recipients, subject, file, text, secondFile).apply { `package` = it.activityInfo.packageName }
            }
            .toMutableList()
    val finalIntent = Intent.createChooser(targetedIntents.removeAt(0), R.string.choose_email_app.toText())
    finalIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_INITIAL_INTENTS, targetedIntents.toTypedArray())
    startActivity(finalIntent)
}

private fun Activity.createEmailShareIntent(recipients: List<String>, subject: String, file: Uri, text: String? = null, secondFile: Uri? = null): Intent {
    val builder = ShareCompat.IntentBuilder.from(this)
            .setType("message/rfc822")
            .setEmailTo(recipients.toTypedArray())
            .setStream(file)
            .setSubject(subject)
    if (secondFile != null) {
        builder.addStream(secondFile)
    }
    if (text != null) {
        builder.setText(text)
    }
    return builder.intent
}

This looks like it could be useful; any chance of getting it in Java?
Kotlin is very similar to Java, you should be able to copy paste and just change few things.
wont work on android 11 due to query package limitation
@Omkar T It did work for me on Android 11, with a provider tag in my Android Manifest. There is good info in the docs.
A huge benefit to this strategy is that it not only works with multiple attachments, but it is an extension on Activity which can easily be used in multiple projects.
R
Rahul Gaur

in Kotlin if anyone is looking

val emailArrray:Array<String> = arrayOf("travelagentsupport@kkk.com")
val intent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO)
intent.data = Uri.parse("mailto:") // only email apps should handle this
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, emailArrray)
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Inquire about travel agent")
if (intent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
    startActivity(intent);
}

N
Nima Derakhshanjan

Following Code worked for me!!

import android.support.v4.app.ShareCompat;
    .
    .
    .
    .
final Intent intent = ShareCompat.IntentBuilder
                        .from(activity)
                        .setType("application/txt")
                        .setSubject(subject)
                        .setText("Hii")
                        .setChooserTitle("Select One")
                        .createChooserIntent()
                        .addFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_WHEN_TASK_RESET)
                        .addFlags(Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION);

activity.startActivity(intent);

E
EpicPandaForce

This works for me perfectly fine:

    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
    intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:" + address));
    startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "E-mail"));

j
juunas

If you want to ensure that your intent is handled only by an email app (and not other text messaging or social apps), then use the ACTION_SENDTO action and include the "mailto:" data scheme. For example:

public void composeEmail(String[] addresses, String subject) {
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
    intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")); // only email apps should handle this
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, addresses);
    intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
    if (intent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
        startActivity(intent);
    }
}

I found this in https://developer.android.com/guide/components/intents-common.html#Email


B
Bruno Bieri

Using intent.setType("message/rfc822"); does work but it shows extra apps that not necessarily handling emails (e.g. GDrive). Using Intent.ACTION_SENDTO with setType("text/plain") is the best but you have to add setData(Uri.parse("mailto:")) to get the best results (only email apps). The full code is as follows:

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
intent.setType("text/plain");
intent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:IT@RMAsoft.NET"));
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Email from My app");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "Place your email message here ...");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Send Email"));

Perfect soultion
p
pcodex

If you want to target Gmail then you could do the following. Note that the intent is "ACTION_SENDTO" and not "ACTION_SEND" and the extra intent fields are not necessary for Gmail.

String uriText =
    "mailto:youremail@gmail.com" + 
    "?subject=" + Uri.encode("your subject line here") + 
    "&body=" + Uri.encode("message body here");

Uri uri = Uri.parse(uriText);

Intent sendIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
sendIntent.setData(uri);
if (sendIntent.resolveActivity(getPackageManager()) != null) {
   startActivity(Intent.createChooser(sendIntent, "Send message")); 
}

K
Kishan Solanki

I am updating Adil's answer in Kotlin,

val intent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO)
intent.data = Uri.parse("mailto:") // only email apps should handle this
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, Array(1) { "test@email.com" })
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "subject")
if (intent.resolveActivity(packageManager) != null) {
    startActivity(intent)
} else {
    showSnackBar(getString(R.string.no_apps_found_to_send_mail), this)
}

This fails even when Gmail is on the app.
@AndroidDev in which device you are facing the issue?
P
Priyankchoudhary
String sendEmailTo = "abc@xyz.com";
String subject = "Subject";
String body = "Body";
            
Uri uri = Uri.parse("mailto:"+sendEmailTo+"?subject="+subject+"&body="+body);
    
startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, uri);

This worked for me. This will only show the mailing application in the intent chooser.

Additionally: One problem that i faced with this method is I was unable to add space in the suggestions and body text. So, to put spaces in the suggestion or body text then replace the space with %20


R
Ramesh R

Please use the below code :

try {
    String uriText =
            "mailto:emailid" +
                    "?subject=" + Uri.encode("Feedback for app") +
                    "&body=" + Uri.encode(deviceInfo);
    Uri uri = Uri.parse(uriText);
    Intent emailIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
    emailIntent.setData(uri);
    startActivity(Intent.createChooser(emailIntent, "Send email using..."));
} catch (android.content.ActivityNotFoundException ex) {
    Toast.makeText(ContactUsActivity.this, "No email clients installed.", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}            

s
sianis

Maybe you should try this: intent.setType("plain/text");

I found it here. I've used it in my app and it shows only E-Mail and Gmail options.


"plain/text" shows Bluetooth, Skype etc. Checkout the desired output in Android Market app. Steps are listed in the question.
Using the MIME type to perform a send operation is a bad idea, because you're basically instructing Android to provide a list of apps that support sending a file of type plain/text, and that isn't even a valid MIME type. That's not the same as sending an e-mail. Use the mailto: protocol instead, because that's what e-mail clients actually understand.
佚名

Compose an email in the phone email client:

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("plain/text");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL, new String[] { "some@email.address" });
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "subject");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "mail body");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, ""));

M
Manish

Use this:

boolean success = EmailIntentBuilder.from(activity)
        .to("support@example.org")
        .cc("developer@example.org")
        .subject("Error report")
        .body(buildErrorReport())
        .start();

use build gradle :

compile 'de.cketti.mailto:email-intent-builder:1.0.0'

g
grasshopper

This is what I use, and it works for me:

//variables
String subject = "Whatever subject you want";
String body = "Whatever text you want to put in the body";
String intentType = "text/html";
String mailToParse = "mailto:";

//start Intent
Intent variableName = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
variableName.setType(intentType);
variableName.setData(Uri.parse(mailToParse));
variableName.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
variableName.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, body);

startActivity(variableName);

This will also let the user choose their preferred email app. The only thing this does not allow you to do is to set the recipient's email address.


You are missing a " on the 2nd line.
M
Mahen

This code is working in my device

Intent mIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO);
mIntent.setData(Uri.parse("mailto:"));
mIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL  , new String[] {"mahendrarajdhami@gmail.com"});
mIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(mIntent, "Send Email Using..."));

it only opens Gmail and Email in my device