NAME

Mail::Message::Field::Structured - one line of a structured message header

INHERITANCE

Mail::Message::Field::Structured
  is a Mail::Message::Field::Full
  is a Mail::Message::Field
  is a Mail::Reporter

Mail::Message::Field::Structured is extended by
  Mail::Message::Field::Addresses
  Mail::Message::Field::URIs

SYNOPSIS

my $f = Mail::Message::Field::Full
           ->new('Content-Type' => 'text/html');

my @encode = (charset => 'jp', use_continuations => 1);
$f->attribute('filename=passwd');
$f->attribute(filename => 'passwd', @encode);

my $attr = Mail::Message::Field::Attribute->new(...);
$f->attribute($attr);

DESCRIPTION

OVERLOADED

overload: ""

overload: +0

overload: <=>

overload: bool

overload: cmp

overload: stringification

METHODS

Constructors

$obj->clone

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->from(FIELD, OPTIONS)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->new(DATA)

    • new LINE

      Pass a LINE as it could be found in a file: a (possibly folded) line which is terminated by a new-line.

    • new NAME, BODY, OPTIONS

      A set of values which shape the line.

    The NAME is a wellformed header name (you may use wellformedName()) to be sure about the casing. The BODY is a string, one object, or an ref-array of objects. In case of objects, they must fit to the constructor of the field: the types which are accepted may differ. The optional ATTRIBUTE list contains Mail::Message::Field::Attribute objects. Finally, there are some OPTIONS.

    Option    --Defined in     --Default
    attributes                   []
    charset     Mail::Message::Field::Full  undef
    datum                        undef
    encoding    Mail::Message::Field::Full  'q'
    force       Mail::Message::Field::Full  false
    language    Mail::Message::Field::Full  undef
    log         Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
    trace       Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'

    . attributes => ATTRS

      There are various ways to specify these attributes: pass a reference to an array which list of key-value pairs representing attributes, or reference to a hash containing these pairs, or an array with Mail::Message::Field::Attribute objects.

    . charset => STRING

    . datum => STRING

      The method name body is very confusing, even in the RFC. In MailBox, for historical reasons, body() returns the past of the field contents before the first semi-colon. foldedBody() and unfoldedBody() address the whole field.

      There is no common name for the piece of data before the parameters (attributes) in the field-content mentioned in the RFCs, so let's call it datum.

    . encoding => 'q'|'Q'|'b'|'B'

    . force => BOOLEAN

    . language => STRING

    . log => LEVEL

    . trace => LEVEL

    example: of a structured field

    my @attrs   = (Mail::Message::Field::Attribute->new(...), ...);
    my @options = (extra => 'the color blue');
    my $t = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new(To => \@addrs, @attrs, @options);

The field

$obj->isStructured

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->isStructured

$obj->length

$obj->nrLines

$obj->print([FILEHANDLE])

$obj->size

$obj->string([WRAP])

$obj->toDisclose

Access to the name

$obj->Name

$obj->name

$obj->wellformedName([STRING])

Access to the body

$obj->body

$obj->decodedBody(OPTIONS)

$obj->folded

$obj->foldedBody([BODY])

$obj->stripCFWS([STRING])

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->stripCFWS([STRING])

$obj->unfoldedBody([BODY, [WRAP]])

Access to the content

$obj->addresses

$obj->attribute(OBJECT|(STRING, OPTIONS)|(NAME,VALUE,OPTIONS))

    Add an attribute to the field. The attributes are added left-to-right into the string representation of the field, although the order of the attributes is un-important, according to the RFCs.

    You may pass a fully prepared Mail::Message::Field::Attribute OBJECT, if you like to do all preparations for correct representation of the data yourself. You may also pass one STRING, which is a fully prepared attribute. This STRING will not be changed, so be careful about quoting and encodings.

    As third possibility, you can specify an attribute NAME and its VALUE. An attribute object will be created for you implicitly in both cases where such object is not supplied, passing the OPTIONS. See Mail::Message::Field::Attribute::new() about the available OPTIONS.

    The attribute object is returned, however, when continuations are used this may be an object you already know about. undef is returned when construction fails (when the attribute is incorrect).

    example:

    $f->attribute(filename => 'passwd');
    $f->attribute(filename => 'passwd', use_continuations => 0);
    
    my $attr = Mail::Message::Field::Attribute->new(...);
    $f->attribute($attr);

$obj->attributes

    Returns a list with all attributes, which are all Mail::Message::Field::Attribute objects. The attributes are not ordered in any way. The list may be empty. Double attributes or continuations are folded into one.

$obj->beautify

$obj->comment([STRING])

$obj->createComment(STRING, OPTIONS)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->createComment(STRING, OPTIONS)

$obj->createPhrase(STRING, OPTIONS)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->createPhrase(STRING, OPTIONS)

$obj->study

$obj->toDate([TIME])

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->toDate([TIME])

$obj->toInt

Other methods

$obj->dateToTimestamp(STRING)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->dateToTimestamp(STRING)

Internals

$obj->consume(LINE | (NAME,BODY|OBJECTS))

$obj->decode(STRING, OPTIONS)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->decode(STRING, OPTIONS)

$obj->defaultWrapLength([LENGTH])

$obj->encode(STRING, OPTIONS)

$obj->fold(NAME, BODY, [MAXCHARS])

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->fold(NAME, BODY, [MAXCHARS])

$obj->setWrapLength([LENGTH])

$obj->stringifyData(STRING|ARRAY|OBJECTS)

$obj->unfold(STRING)

Parsing

$obj->consumeComment(STRING)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->consumeComment(STRING)

$obj->consumeDotAtom(STRING)

$obj->consumePhrase(STRING)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->consumePhrase(STRING)

$obj->datum([VALUE])

    Equivalent to body(), but maybe less confusing.

$obj->parse(STRING)

$obj->produceBody

Error handling

$obj->AUTOLOAD

$obj->addReport(OBJECT)

$obj->defaultTrace([LEVEL]|[LOGLEVEL, TRACELEVEL]|[LEVEL, CALLBACK])

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->defaultTrace([LEVEL]|[LOGLEVEL, TRACELEVEL]|[LEVEL, CALLBACK])

$obj->errors

$obj->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])

$obj->logPriority(LEVEL)

Mail::Message::Field::Structured->logPriority(LEVEL)

$obj->logSettings

$obj->notImplemented

$obj->report([LEVEL])

$obj->reportAll([LEVEL])

$obj->trace([LEVEL])

$obj->warnings

Cleanup

$obj->DESTROY

$obj->inGlobalDestruction

DETAILS

DIAGNOSTICS

Warning: Field content is not numerical: $content

    The numeric value of a field is requested (for instance the Lines or Content-Length fields should be numerical), however the data contains weird characters.

Warning: Illegal character in charset '$charset'

    The field is created with an utf8 string which only contains data from the specified character set. However, that character set can never be a valid name because it contains characters which are not permitted.

Warning: Illegal character in field name $name

    A new field is being created which does contain characters not permitted by the RFCs. Using this field in messages may break other e-mail clients or transfer agents, and therefore mutulate or extinguish your message.

Warning: Illegal character in language '$lang'

    The field is created with data which is specified to be in a certain language, however, the name of the language cannot be valid: it contains characters which are not permitted by the RFCs.

Warning: Illegal encoding '$encoding', used 'q'

    The RFCs only permit base64 (b or B ) or quoted-printable (q or Q) encoding. Other than these four options are illegal.

Error: Package $package does not implement $method.

    Fatal error: the specific package (or one of its superclasses) does not implement this method where it should. This message means that some other related classes do implement this method however the class at hand does not. Probably you should investigate this and probably inform the author of the package.

SEE ALSO

This module is part of Mail-Box distribution version 2.075, built on September 25, 2007. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/

LICENSE

Copyrights 2001-2007 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html