NAME
Mail::Message::Convert::Html - Format messages from or to HTML
CLASS HIERARCHY
Mail::Message::Convert::Html
is a Mail::Message::Convert
is a Mail::Reporter
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::Message::Convert::Html;
my $Html = Mail::Message::Convert::Html->new;
print $html->fieldToHtml($head);
print $html->headToHtmlHead($head);
print $html->headToHtmlTable($head);
print $html->textToHtml($text);
DESCRIPTION
The package contains various translators which handle HTML or XHTML without the help of external modules. There are more HTML related modules, which do require extra packages to be installed.
METHOD INDEX
Methods prefixed with an abbreviation are described in Mail::Reporter (MR), Mail::Message::Convert (MMC).
The general methods for Mail::Message::Convert::Html
objects:
MR errors new OPTIONS
fieldToHtml FIELD, [SUBJECT] MR report [LEVEL]
headToHtmlHead HEAD, META MR reportAll [LEVEL]
headToHtmlTable HEAD, [TABL... textToHtml LINES
MR log [LEVEL [,STRINGS]] MR trace [LEVEL]
The extra methods for extension writers:
MR AUTOLOAD MR logPriority LEVEL
MR DESTROY MR logSettings
fieldContentsToHtml FIELD, ... MR notImplemented
MR inGlobalDestruction MMC selectedFields HEAD
METHODS
- new OPTIONS
-
OPTION DESCRIBED IN DEFAULT fields Mail::Message::Convert <some> head_mailto Mail::Message::Convert::Html 1 log Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS' produce Mail::Message::Convert::Html 'HTML' trace Mail::Reporter 'WARNINGS'
head_mailto => BOOLEAN
Whether to replace e-mail addresses in some header lines with links.
produce => 'HTML'|'XHTML'
Produce HTML or XHTML output. The output is slightly different, even html browsers will usually accept the xhtml data.
- textToHtml LINES
-
Translate one or more LINES from text into HTML. Each line is taken one after the other, and only simple things are translated. The
plainToHtml
method is able to convert large plain texts in a descent fashion. In scalar context, the resulting lines are returned as one. - fieldToHtml FIELD, [SUBJECT]
-
Reformat one header line field to HTML. The FIELD's name is printed in bold, followed by the formatted field content, which is produced by the
fieldContentsToHtml
method. - headToHtmlTable HEAD, [TABLE-PARAMS]
-
Produce a display of the selected fields of the header (see the
selectedFields
method) in a table shape. The optional TABLE-PARAMS are added as parameters to the produced TABLE tag. In list context, the separate lines are returned. In scalar context, everything is returned as one.Example:
print $html->headToHtmlTable($head, 'width="50%"');
- headToHtmlHead HEAD, META
-
Translate the selected header lines (fields) to an html page header. Each selected field will get its own meta line with the same name as the line. Futhermore:
the
Subject
field will become thetitle
,From
is used for theAuthor
Besides, you can specify your own meta fields, which will overrule header fields. Empty fields will not be included. When a
title
is specified, this will become the html title, otherwise theSubject
field is taken. In list context, the lines are separately, where in scalar context the whole text is returned as one.If you need to add lines to the head (for instance, http-equiv lines), then splice them before the last element in the returned list.
Example:
my @head = $html->headToHtmlHead ( $head , description => 'This is a message' , generator => 'Mail::Box' ); splice @head, -1, 0, '<meta http-equiv=...>'; print @head;
METHODS for extension writers
- fieldContentsToHtml FIELD, [SUBJECT]
-
Format one field from the header to HTML. When the header line usually usually contains e-mail addresses, the line is scanned and valid addresses are linked with an
mailto:
anchor. The SUBJECT can be specified to be included in that link.
SEE ALSO
For support and additional documentation, see http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/
AUTHOR
Mark Overmeer (mailbox@overmeer.net). All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
VERSION
This code is beta, version 2.015.
Copyright (c) 2001-2002 Mark Overmeer. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.