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Mail::Message::Field::User(Contributed Perl DocumMail::Message::Field::Full(3)

NAME
       Mail::Message::Field::Full - construct one smart line in a message
       header

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

	Mail::Message::Field::Full is extended by
	  Mail::Message::Field::Structured
	  Mail::Message::Field::Unstructured

SYNOPSIS
	!! UNDER CONSTRUCTION
	!! The details of this module are NOT FINISHED yet
	!! Most parts are already usable, however.  With care!

	# Getting to understand the complexity of a header field ...

	my $fast = $msg->head->get('subject');
	my $full = Mail::Message::Field::Full->from($fast);

	my $full = $msg->head->get('subject')->study;  # same
	my $full = $msg->head->study('subject');       # same
	my $full = $msg->get('subject');	       # same

	# ... or build a complex header field yourself

	my $f = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new('To');
	my $f = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new('Subject: hi!');
	my $f = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new(Subject => 'hi!');

DESCRIPTION
       This is the full implementation of a header field: it has full
       understanding of all predefined header fields.  These objects will be
       quite slow, because header fields can be very complex.  Of course, this
       class delivers the optimal result, but for a quite large penalty in
       performance and memory consumption.  Are you willing to accept?

       This class supports the common header description from RFC2822
       (formerly RFC822), the extensions with respect to character set
       encodings as specified in RFC2047, and the extensions on language
       specification and long parameter wrapping from RFC2231.	If you do not
       need the latter two, then the Mail::Message::Field::Fast and
       Mail::Message::Field::Flex are enough for your application.

OVERLOADED
       overload: ""

	   See "OVERLOADED" in Mail::Message::Field

       overload: +0

	   See "OVERLOADED" in Mail::Message::Field

       overload: <=>

	   See "OVERLOADED" in Mail::Message::Field

       overload: bool

	   See "OVERLOADED" in Mail::Message::Field

       overload: cmp

	   See "OVERLOADED" in Mail::Message::Field

       overload: stringification

	   In string context, the decoded body is returned, as if
	   decodedBody() would have been called.

METHODS
   Constructors
       $obj->clone

	   See "Constructors" in Mail::Message::Field

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

	   Convert any FIELD (a Mail::Message::Field object) into a new
	   Mail::Message::Field::Full object.  This conversion is done the
	   hard way: the string which is produced by the original object is
	   parsed again.  Usually, the string which is parsed is exactly the
	   line (or lines) as found in the original input source, which is a
	   good thing because Full fields are much more carefull with the
	   actual content.

	   OPTIONS are passed to the constructor (see new()).  In any case,
	   some extensions of this Full field class is returned.  It depends
	   on which field is created what kind of class we get.

	   example:

	    my $fast = $msg->head->get('subject');
	    my $full = Mail::Message::Field::Full->from($fast);

	    my $full = $msg->head->get('subject')->study;  # same
	    my $full = $msg->head->study('subject');	   # same
	    my $full = $msg->get('subject');		   # same

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

	   Creating a new field object the correct way is a lot of work,
	   because there is so much freedom in the RFCs, but at the same time
	   so many restrictions.  Most fields are implemented, but if you have
	   your own field (and do no want to contribute it to MailBox), then
	   simply call new on your own package.

	   You have the choice to instantiate the object as string or in
	   prepared parts:

	   ·   new LINE, OPTIONS

	       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
	    charset		       undef
	    encoding		       'q'
	    force		       false
	    language		       undef
	    log	      Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
	    trace     Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'

	   . charset => STRING

	       The body is specified in utf8, and must become 7-bits ascii to
	       be transmited.  Specify a charset to which the multi-byte utf8
	       is converted before it gets encoded.  See encode(), which does
	       the job.

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

	       Non-ascii characters are encoded using Quoted-Printable ('q' or
	       'Q') or Base64 ('b' or 'B') encoding.

	   . force => BOOLEAN

	       Enforce encoding in the specified charset, even when it is not
	       needed because the body does not contain any non-ascii
	       characters.

	   . language => STRING

	       The language used can be specified, however is rarely used my
	       mail clients.

	   . log => LEVEL

	   . trace => LEVEL

	   example:

	    my $s = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new('Subject: Hello World');
	    my $s = Mail::Message::Field::Full->new('Subject', 'Hello World');

	    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::Full->isStructured

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->length

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->nrLines

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->print([FILEHANDLE])

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->size

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->string([WRAP])

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->toDisclose

	   See "The field" in Mail::Message::Field

   Access to the name
       $obj->Name

	   See "Access to the name" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->name

	   See "Access to the name" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->wellformedName([STRING])

	   See "Access to the name" in Mail::Message::Field

   Access to the body
       $obj->body

	   See "Access to the body" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->decodedBody(OPTIONS)

	   Returns the unfolded body of the field, where encodings are
	   resolved.  The returned line will still contain comments and such.
	   The OPTIONS are passed to the decoder, see decode().

	   BE WARNED: if the field is a structured field, the content may
	   change syntax, because of encapsulated special characters.  By
	   default, the body is decoded as text, which results in a small
	   difference within comments as well (read the RFC).

       $obj->folded

	   See "Access to the body" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->foldedBody([BODY])

	   See "Access to the body" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->stripCFWS([STRING])

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

	   See "Access to the body" in Mail::Message::Field

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

	   See "Access to the body" in Mail::Message::Field

   Access to the content
       $obj->addresses

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->attribute(NAME [, VALUE])

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->attributes

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->beautify

	   For structured header fields, this removes the original encoding of
	   the field's body (the format as it was offered to parse()),
	   therefore the next request for the field will have to re-produce
	   the read data clean and nice.  For unstructured bodies, this method
	   doesn't do a thing.

       $obj->comment([STRING])

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->createComment(STRING, OPTIONS)

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

	   Create a comment to become part in a field.	Comments are
	   automatically included within parenthesis.  Matching pairs of
	   parenthesis are permitted within the STRING.	 When a non-matching
	   parenthesis are used, it is only permitted with an escape (a
	   backslash) in front of them.	 These backslashes will be added
	   automatically if needed (don't worry!).  Backslashes will stay,
	   except at the end, where it will be doubled.

	   The OPTIONS are "charset", "language", and "encoding" as always.
	   The created comment is returned.

       $obj->createPhrase(STRING, OPTIONS)

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

	   A phrase is a text which plays a well defined role.	This is the
	   main difference with comments, which have do specified meaning.
	   Some special characters in the phrase will cause it to be
	   surrounded with double quotes: do not specify them yourself.

	   The OPTIONS are "charset", "language", and "encoding", as always.

       $obj->study

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->toDate([TIME])

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

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->toInt

	   See "Access to the content" in Mail::Message::Field

   Other methods
       $obj->dateToTimestamp(STRING)

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

	   See "Other methods" in Mail::Message::Field

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

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->decode(STRING, OPTIONS)

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

	   Decode field encoded STRING to an utf8 string.  The input STRING is
	   part of a header field, and as such, may contain encoded words in
	   "=?...?.?...?=" format defined by RFC2047.  The STRING may contain
	   multiple encoded parts, maybe using different character sets.

	   Be warned:  you MUST first interpret the field into parts, like
	   phrases and comments, and then decode each part separately,
	   otherwise the decoded text may interfere with your markup
	   characters.

	   Be warned: language information, which is defined in RFC2231, is
	   ignored.

	   Encodings with unknown charsets are left untouched [requires
	   v2.085, otherwise croaked].	Unknown characters within an charset
	   are replaced by a '?'.

	    Option --Default
	    is_text  1

	   . is_text => BOOLEAN

	       Encoding on text is slightly more complicated than encoding
	       structured data, because it contains blanks.  Visible blanks
	       have to be ignored between two encoded words in the text, but
	       not when an encoded word follows or preceeds an unencoded word.
	       Phrases and comments are texts.

	   example:

	    print Mail::Message::Field::Full->decode('=?iso-8859-1?Q?J=F8rgen?=');
	       # prints	  JE<0slash>rgen

       $obj->defaultWrapLength([LENGTH])

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->encode(STRING, OPTIONS)

	   Encode the (possibly utf8 encoded) STRING to a string which is
	   acceptable to the RFC2047 definition of a header: only containing
	   us-ascii characters.

	    Option  --Default
	    charset   'us-ascii'
	    encoding  'q'
	    force     <flase>
	    language  undef

	   . charset => STRING

	       STRING is an utf8 string which has to be translated into any
	       byte-wise character set for transport, because MIME-headers can
	       only contain ascii characters.

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

	       The character encoding to be used.  With "q" or "Q", quoted-
	       printable encoding will be used.	 With "b " or "B ", base64
	       encoding will be taken.

	   . force => BOOLEAN

	       Encode the string, even when it only contains us-ascii
	       characters.  By default, this is off because it decreases
	       readibility of the produced header fields.

	   . language => STRING

	       RFC2231 defines how to specify language encodings in encoded
	       words.  The STRING is a strandard iso language name.

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

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

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->setWrapLength([LENGTH])

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

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

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

       $obj->unfold(STRING)

	   See "Internals" in Mail::Message::Field

   Parsing
       $obj->consumeComment(STRING)

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

	   Try to read a comment from the STRING.  When successful, the
	   comment without encapsulation parenthesis is returned, together
	   with the rest of the string.

       $obj->consumeDotAtom(STRING)

	   Returns three elemens: the atom-text, the rest string, and the
	   concatenated comments.  Both atom and comments can be undef.

       $obj->consumePhrase(STRING)

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

	   Take the STRING, and try to strip-off a valid phrase.  In the
	   obsolete phrase syntax, any sequence of words is accepted as phrase
	   (as long as certain special characters are not used).  RFC2882 is
	   stricter: only one word or a quoted string is allowed.  As always,
	   the obsolete syntax is accepted, and the new syntax is produced.

	   This method returns two elements: the phrase (or undef) followed by
	   the resulting string.  The phrase will be removed from the optional
	   quotes.  Be warned that "" will return an empty, valid phrase.

	   example:

	    my ($phrase, $rest) = $field->consumePhrase( q["hi!" <sales@example.com>] );

       $obj->parse(STRING)

	   Get the detailed information from the STRING, and store the data
	   found in the field object.  The accepted input is very field type
	   dependent.  Unstructured fields do no parsing whatsoever.

       $obj->produceBody

	   Produce the text for the field, based on the information stored
	   within the field object.

	   Usually, you wish the exact same line as was found in the input
	   source of a message.	 But when you have created a field yourself,
	   it should get formatted.  You may call beautify() on a preformatted
	   field to enforce a call to this method when the field is needed
	   later.

   Error handling
       $obj->AUTOLOAD

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->addReport(OBJECT)

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

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

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

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->errors

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

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

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

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->logPriority(LEVEL)

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

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->logSettings

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->notImplemented

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->report([LEVEL])

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->reportAll([LEVEL])

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->trace([LEVEL])

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->warnings

	   See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

   Cleanup
       $obj->DESTROY

	   See "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter

       $obj->inGlobalDestruction

	   See "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter

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 2.094, built on
       April 06, 2010. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/

LICENSE
       Copyrights 2001-2010 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

perl v5.10.1			  2010-04-06	 Mail::Message::Field::Full(3)
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