Email::MIME =========== This is a port of perl 5's Email::MIME. ## Example Usage ## use Email::MIME; my $eml = Email::MIME.new($raw-mail-text); say $eml.body-str; my $new = Email::MIME.create(header-str => ['from' => 'root+github@retupmoca.com', 'subject' => 'This is a»test.'], attributes => {'content-type' => 'text/plain', 'charset' => 'utf-8', 'encoding' => 'quoted-printable'}, body-str => 'Hello«World'); say ~$new; ## Methods ## - `new(Str $text)` - `create(:$header, :$header-str, :$attributes, :$parts, :$body, :$body-str)` - `filename($force = False)` - `invent-filename($ct?)` - `filename-set($filename)` - `boundary-set($string)` - `content-type()` - `content-type-set($ct)` - `charset-set($charset)` - `name-set($name)` - `format-set($format)` - `disposition-set($disposition)` - `encoding-set($enc)` - `parts()` Returns the subparts of the current message. If there are no subparts, will return the current message. - `subparts()` Returns the subparts of the current message. If there are no subparts, will return an empty list. - `walk-parts($callback)` Visits each MIME part once, calling `$callback($part)` on each. - `debug-structure()` Prints out the part structure of the email. - `parts-set(@parts)` Sets the passed `Email::MIME` objects as the parts of the email. - `parts-add(@parts)` Adds the passed `Email::MIME` objects to the list of parts in the email. - `body-str( --> Str)` Returns the mail body, decoded according to the charset and transfer encoding headers. - `body-str-set(Str $body)` Sets the mail body to $body, encoding it using the charset and transfer encoding configured. - `body( --> Buf)` Returns the mail body as a binary blob, after decoding it from the transfer encoding. - `body-set(Blob $data)` Sets the mail body to `$data`. Will encode $data using the configured transfer encoding. - `body-raw()` Returns the raw body of the email (What will appear when .Str is called) - `body-raw-set($body)` Sets the raw body of the email (What will appear when .Str is called) - `header-str-pairs()` Returns the full header data for an email. - `header-str($name, :$multi)` Returns the email header with the name `$name`. If `:$multi` is not passed, then this will return the first header found. If `:$multi` is set, then this will return a list of all headers with the name `$name` (note the change from v1.0!) - `header-str-set($name, *@lines)` Sets the header `$name`. Adds one `$name` header for each additional argument passed. - `header-names()` Returns a list of header names in the email. - `headers()` Alias of `header-names()` - `header($name)` Returns a list of email headers with the name `$name`. If used in string context, will act like the first value of the list. (So you can call `say $eml.header('Subject')` and it will work correctly). Note that this will not decode any encoded headers. - `header-set($name, *@lines)` Sets the header `$name`. Adds one `$name` header for each additional argument passed. This will not encode any headers, even if they have non-ascii characters. - `header-pairs()` Returns the full header data for an email. Note that this will not decode any encoded headers. $eml.header-pairs(); # --> [['Subject', 'test'], ['From', 'me@example.com']] - `as-string()`, `Str()` Returns the full raw email, suitable for piping into sendmail. - `crlf()` - `header-obj()` - `header-obj-set($obj)` ## License ## All files in this repository are licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC0 License; for details, please see the LICENSE file