18.1.3. email.generator
: Generating MIME documents
One of the most common tasks is to generate the flat text of the email message
represented by a message object structure. You will need to do this if you want
to send your message via the smtplib
module or the nntplib
module,
or print the message on the console. Taking a message object structure and
producing a flat text document is the job of the Generator
class.
Again, as with the email.parser
module, you aren’t limited to the
functionality of the bundled generator; you could write one from scratch
yourself. However the bundled generator knows how to generate most email in a
standards-compliant way, should handle MIME and non-MIME email messages just
fine, and is designed so that the transformation from flat text, to a message
structure via the Parser
class, and back to flat text,
is idempotent (the input is identical to the output) [1]. On the other hand,
using the Generator on a Message
constructed by program
may result in changes to the Message
object as defaults
are filled in.
Here are the public methods of the Generator
class, imported from the
email.generator
module:
-
class
email.generator.
Generator
(outfp[, mangle_from_[, maxheaderlen]]) The constructor for the
Generator
class takes a file-like object called outfp for an argument. outfp must support thewrite()
method and be usable as the output file in a Python extended print statement.Optional mangle_from_ is a flag that, when
True
, puts a>
character in front of any line in the body that starts exactly asFrom
, i.e.From
followed by a space at the beginning of the line. This is the only guaranteed portable way to avoid having such lines be mistaken for a Unix mailbox format envelope header separator (see WHY THE CONTENT-LENGTH FORMAT IS BAD for details). mangle_from_ defaults toTrue
, but you might want to set this toFalse
if you are not writing Unix mailbox format files.Optional maxheaderlen specifies the longest length for a non-continued header. When a header line is longer than maxheaderlen (in characters, with tabs expanded to 8 spaces), the header will be split as defined in the
Header
class. Set to zero to disable header wrapping. The default is 78, as recommended (but not required) by RFC 2822.The other public
Generator
methods are:-
flatten
(msg[, unixfrom]) Print the textual representation of the message object structure rooted at msg to the output file specified when the
Generator
instance was created. Subparts are visited depth-first and the resulting text will be properly MIME encoded.Optional unixfrom is a flag that forces the printing of the envelope header delimiter before the first RFC 2822 header of the root message object. If the root object has no envelope header, a standard one is crafted. By default, this is set to
False
to inhibit the printing of the envelope delimiter.Note that for subparts, no envelope header is ever printed.
New in version 2.2.2.
-
clone
(fp) Return an independent clone of this
Generator
instance with the exact same options.New in version 2.2.2.
-
As a convenience, see the methods Message.as_string()
and
str(aMessage)
, a.k.a. Message.__str__()
, which simplify the generation
of a formatted string representation of a message object. For more detail, see
email.message
.
The email.generator
module also provides a derived class, called
DecodedGenerator
which is like the Generator
base class,
except that non-text parts are substituted with a format string
representing the part.
-
class
email.generator.
DecodedGenerator
(outfp[, mangle_from_[, maxheaderlen[, fmt]]]) This class, derived from
Generator
walks through all the subparts of a message. If the subpart is of main type text, then it prints the decoded payload of the subpart. Optional _mangle_from_ and maxheaderlen are as with theGenerator
base class.If the subpart is not of main type text, optional fmt is a format string that is used instead of the message payload. fmt is expanded with the following keywords,
%(keyword)s
format:type
– Full MIME type of the non-text partmaintype
– Main MIME type of the non-text partsubtype
– Sub-MIME type of the non-text partfilename
– Filename of the non-text partdescription
– Description associated with the non-text partencoding
– Content transfer encoding of the non-text part
The default value for fmt is
None
, meaning[Non-text (%(type)s) part of message omitted, filename %(filename)s]
New in version 2.2.2.
Changed in version 2.5: The previously deprecated method __call__()
was removed.
Footnotes
[1] | This statement assumes that you use the appropriate setting for the
unixfrom argument, and that you set maxheaderlen=0 (which will
preserve whatever the input line lengths were). It is also not strictly
true, since in many cases runs of whitespace in headers are collapsed
into single blanks. The latter is a bug that will eventually be fixed. |