NAME

Mail::Message::Field::Fast - one line of a message header

CLASS INHERITANCE

Mail::Message::Field::Fast is a Mail::Message::Field is a Mail::Reporter

SYNOPSIS

See Mail::Message::Field

DESCRIPTION

This is the faster, but less flexible implementation of a header field. The data is stored in an array, and some hacks are made to speeds things up. Be gentle with me, and consider that each message contains many of these lines, so speed is very important here.

METHODS

Initiation

consume LINE | (NAME,BODY|OBJECTS)

See Mail::Message::Field::consume()

new DATA

The constructor of this object does not follow the usual practise within the Mail::Box suite: it does not use the constructor Mail::Reporter::new(). Therefor it has no logging or tracing facilities.

The method can be used in one of the following ways:

  • new LINE

  • new NAME, (BODY|OBJECTS), [ATTRIBUTES]

Create a new header field object. Specify the whole LINE at once, and it will be split-up for you. I case you already have the parts of the header line, you may specify them separately as NAME and BODY.

In case you specify a single OBJECT, or a reference to an array of OBJECTS, these objects are processed to become suitable to fill a field, usually by simple strification. When you specify one or more Mail::Address objects, these are transformed into a string using their format method. You may also add one Mail::Message::Field, whose body is taken. In case of an array, the elements are joined into one string with a comma.

ATTRIBUTES can be exactly one string which may contain multiple attributes at once, quoted and formatted as required in RFC2822. As alternative, list of key-value pairs can be used. In this case, the values will get quoted if needed and everything formatted as the protocol demands.

OPTION               DEFAULT
log                  <disabled>
trace                <disabled>
log => LEVEL

See Mail::Reporter::new(log)

trace => LEVEL

See Mail::Reporter::new(trace)

Examples:

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    'Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII');

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    'Content-Type' => 'text/plain; charset=US-ASCII');

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    'Content-Type' => 'text/plain', 'charset=US-ASCII');

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    'Content-Type' => 'text/plain', charset => 'US-ASCII');

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    To => Mail::Address->new('my name', 'me@example.com');

my $mime = Mail::Message::Field->new(
    Cc => [ Mail::Address->new('your name', 'you@example.com')
          , Mail::Address->new('his name', 'he@example.com')
          ]);

But in practice, you can simply call

my $head = Mail::Message::Head->new;
$head->add('Content-Type' => 'text/plain', charset => 'US-ASCII');

which implicitly calls this constructor (when needed). You can specify the same things for add() as this new accepts.

The Field

clone

See Mail::Message::Field::clone()

isStructured

See Mail::Message::Field::isStructured()

length

See Mail::Message::Field::length()

Access to the Field

Name

See Mail::Message::Field::Name()

addresses

See Mail::Message::Field::addresses()

attribute NAME [, VALUE]

See Mail::Message::Field::attribute()

body

See Mail::Message::Field::body()

comment [STRING]

See Mail::Message::Field::comment()

dateToTimestamp STRING

See Mail::Message::Field::dateToTimestamp()

folded

See Mail::Message::Field::folded()

folded_body [BODY]

See Mail::Message::Field::folded_body()

name

See Mail::Message::Field::name()

nrLines

See Mail::Message::Field::nrLines()

See Mail::Message::Field::print()

size

See Mail::Message::Field::size()

stripCFWS STRING

See Mail::Message::Field::stripCFWS()

toDate [TIME]

See Mail::Message::Field::toDate()

toDisclose

See Mail::Message::Field::toDisclose()

toInt

See Mail::Message::Field::toInt()

toString [WRAP]

See Mail::Message::Field::toString()

unfolded_body [BODY, [WRAP]]

See Mail::Message::Field::unfolded_body()

wellformedName [STRING]

See Mail::Message::Field::wellformedName()

Reading and Writing [internals]

defaultWrapLength [LENGTH]

See Mail::Message::Field::defaultWrapLength()

fold NAME, BODY, [MAXCHARS]

See Mail::Message::Field::fold()

setWrapLength [LENGTH]

See Mail::Message::Field::setWrapLength()

unfold STRING

See Mail::Message::Field::unfold()

Logging and Tracing

defaultTrace [LEVEL, [LEVEL]

See Mail::Reporter::defaultTrace()

errors

See Mail::Reporter::errors()

log [LEVEL [,STRINGS]]

See Mail::Reporter::log()

report [LEVEL]

See Mail::Reporter::report()

reportAll [LEVEL]

See Mail::Reporter::reportAll()

trace [LEVEL]

See Mail::Reporter::trace()

warnings

See Mail::Reporter::warnings()

Other Methods

AUTOLOAD

See Mail::Reporter::AUTOLOAD()

DESTROY

See Mail::Reporter::DESTROY()

inGlobalDestruction

See Mail::Reporter::inGlobalDestruction()

logPriority LEVEL

See Mail::Reporter::logPriority()

logSettings

See Mail::Reporter::logSettings()

notImplemented

See Mail::Reporter::notImplemented()

SEE ALSO

A good start to read is Mail::Box-Overview. More documentation and a mailinglist are available from the project's website at http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/.

AUTHOR

Mark Overmeer (mark@overmeer.net) with the help of many.

VERSION

This code is beta, version 2.022.

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.