Mail::Field - Base class for manipulation of mail header fields
use Mail::Field;
$field = Mail::Field->new('Subject', 'some subject text');
print $field->tag,": ",$field->stringify,"\n";
$field = Mail::Field->subject('some subject text');
Mail::Field is a base class for packages that create and manipulate fields from Email
(and MIME) headers. Each different field will have its own sub-class,
defining its own interface.
This document describes the minimum interface that each sub-class should provide, and also guidlines on how the field specific interface should be defined.
Mail::Field, and it's sub-classes define several methods which return new objects. These can all be termed to be constructors.
The new constructor will create an object in the class which defines the field specified by the tag argument.
After creation of the object :-
If the tag argument is followed by a single string then the parse method will be called with this string.
If the tag argument is followed by more than one arguments then the create
method will be called with these arguments.
This constuctor takes as arguments the tag name, a Mail::Head object and optionally an index.
If the index argument is given then extract will retrieve the given tag from the Mail::Head object and create a new Mail::Field based object.
undef will be returned in the field does not exist.
If the index argument is not given the the result depends on the context in
which extract is called. If called in a scalar context the result will be as if extract was called with an index value of zero. If called in an array context then
all tags will be retrieved and a list of
Mail::Field objects will be returned.
This constructor takes as arguments a list of Mail::Field objects, which should all be of the same sub-class, and creates a new
object in that same class.
This constructor is nor defined in Mail::Field as there is no generic way to combine the various field types. Each
sub-class should define its own combine constructor, if combining is
possible/allowed.
All sub-classes should be called Mail::Field::name where name is derived from the tag using these rules.
Consider a tag as being made up of elements separated by '-'
Convert all characters to lowercase except the first in each element, which should be uppercase.
name is then created from these elements by using the first N characters from each element.
N is calculated by using the formula :-
int((7 + #elements) / #elements)
name is then limited to a maximum of 8 characters, keeping the first 8 characters
For an example of this take a look at the definition of the
_header_pkg_name subroutine in Mail::Field
Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>
Eryq <eryq@rhine.gsfc.nasa.gov> - for all the help in defining this package so that Mail::* and MIME::* can be integrated together.
Copyright (c) 1995-7 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.