Image.py and class Image => MIMEImage.py and MIMEImage

Text.py and class Text => MIMEText.py and MIMEText

MessageRFC822.py and class MessageRFC822 => MIMEMessage.py and MIMEMessage

These are renamed so as to be more consistent; these are MIME specific
derived classes for when creating the object model out of whole cloth.
This commit is contained in:
Barry Warsaw 2001-09-26 05:34:30 +00:00
parent b384e01796
commit 3dd978dfff
4 changed files with 40 additions and 36 deletions

46
Lib/email/MIMEImage.py Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
# Copyright (C) 2001 Python Software Foundation
# Author: barry@zope.com (Barry Warsaw)
"""Class representing image/* type MIME documents.
"""
import imghdr
# Intrapackage imports
import MIMEBase
import Errors
import Encoders
class MIMEImage(MIMEBase.MIMEBase):
"""Class for generating image/* type MIME documents."""
def __init__(self, _imagedata, _subtype=None,
_encoder=Encoders.encode_base64, **_params):
"""Create an image/* type MIME document.
_imagedata is a string containing the raw image data. If this data
can be decoded by the standard Python `imghdr' module, then the
subtype will be automatically included in the Content-Type: header.
Otherwise, you can specify the specific image subtype via the _subtype
parameter.
_encoder is a function which will perform the actual encoding for
transport of the image data. It takes one argument, which is this
Image instance. It should use get_payload() and set_payload() to
change the payload to the encoded form. It should also add any
Content-Transfer-Encoding: or other headers to the message as
necessary. The default encoding is Base64.
Any additional keyword arguments are passed to the base class
constructor, which turns them into parameters on the Content-Type:
header.
"""
if _subtype is None:
_subtype = imghdr.what(None, _imagedata)
if _subtype is None:
raise TypeError, 'Could not guess image MIME subtype'
MIMEBase.MIMEBase.__init__(self, 'image', _subtype, **_params)
self.set_payload(_imagedata)
_encoder(self)