View file File name : MimeWriter.pyo Content :� zfc @ sl d Z d d l Z d g Z d d l Z e j d e d � d d d � � YZ e d k rh d d l Z n d S( s� Generic MIME writer. This module defines the class MimeWriter. The MimeWriter class implements a basic formatter for creating MIME multi-part files. It doesn't seek around the output file nor does it use large amounts of buffer space. You must write the parts out in the order that they should occur in the final file. MimeWriter does buffer the headers you add, allowing you to rearrange their order. i����Nt MimeWritersB the MimeWriter module is deprecated; use the email package insteadi c B s_ e Z d Z d � Z d d � Z d � Z g d d � Z d g d d � Z d � Z d � Z RS( sO Generic MIME writer. Methods: __init__() addheader() flushheaders() startbody() startmultipartbody() nextpart() lastpart() A MIME writer is much more primitive than a MIME parser. It doesn't seek around on the output file, and it doesn't use large amounts of buffer space, so you have to write the parts in the order they should occur on the output file. It does buffer the headers you add, allowing you to rearrange their order. General usage is: f = <open the output file> w = MimeWriter(f) ...call w.addheader(key, value) 0 or more times... followed by either: f = w.startbody(content_type) ...call f.write(data) for body data... or: w.startmultipartbody(subtype) for each part: subwriter = w.nextpart() ...use the subwriter's methods to create the subpart... w.lastpart() The subwriter is another MimeWriter instance, and should be treated in the same way as the toplevel MimeWriter. This way, writing recursive body parts is easy. Warning: don't forget to call lastpart()! XXX There should be more state so calls made in the wrong order are detected. Some special cases: - startbody() just returns the file passed to the constructor; but don't use this knowledge, as it may be changed. - startmultipartbody() actually returns a file as well; this can be used to write the initial 'if you can read this your mailer is not MIME-aware' message. - If you call flushheaders(), the headers accumulated so far are written out (and forgotten); this is useful if you don't need a body part at all, e.g. for a subpart of type message/rfc822 that's (mis)used to store some header-like information. - Passing a keyword argument 'prefix=<flag>' to addheader(), start*body() affects where the header is inserted; 0 means append at the end, 1 means insert at the start; default is append for addheader(), but insert for start*body(), which use it to determine where the Content-Type header goes. c C s | | _ g | _ d S( N( t _fpt _headers( t selft fp( ( s"