1:mod:`email.header`: Internationalized headers 2---------------------------------------------- 3 4.. module:: email.header 5 :synopsis: Representing non-ASCII headers 6 7 8:rfc:`2822` is the base standard that describes the format of email messages. 9It derives from the older :rfc:`822` standard which came into widespread use at 10a time when most email was composed of ASCII characters only. :rfc:`2822` is a 11specification written assuming email contains only 7-bit ASCII characters. 12 13Of course, as email has been deployed worldwide, it has become 14internationalized, such that language specific character sets can now be used in 15email messages. The base standard still requires email messages to be 16transferred using only 7-bit ASCII characters, so a slew of RFCs have been 17written describing how to encode email containing non-ASCII characters into 18:rfc:`2822`\ -compliant format. These RFCs include :rfc:`2045`, :rfc:`2046`, 19:rfc:`2047`, and :rfc:`2231`. The :mod:`email` package supports these standards 20in its :mod:`email.header` and :mod:`email.charset` modules. 21 22If you want to include non-ASCII characters in your email headers, say in the 23:mailheader:`Subject` or :mailheader:`To` fields, you should use the 24:class:`Header` class and assign the field in the :class:`~email.message.Message` 25object to an instance of :class:`Header` instead of using a string for the header 26value. Import the :class:`Header` class from the :mod:`email.header` module. 27For example:: 28 29 >>> from email.message import Message 30 >>> from email.header import Header 31 >>> msg = Message() 32 >>> h = Header('p\xf6stal', 'iso-8859-1') 33 >>> msg['Subject'] = h 34 >>> print msg.as_string() 35 Subject: =?iso-8859-1?q?p=F6stal?= 36 37 38 39Notice here how we wanted the :mailheader:`Subject` field to contain a non-ASCII 40character? We did this by creating a :class:`Header` instance and passing in 41the character set that the byte string was encoded in. When the subsequent 42:class:`~email.message.Message` instance was flattened, the :mailheader:`Subject` 43field was properly :rfc:`2047` encoded. MIME-aware mail readers would show this 44header using the embedded ISO-8859-1 character. 45 46.. versionadded:: 2.2.2 47 48Here is the :class:`Header` class description: 49 50 51.. class:: Header([s[, charset[, maxlinelen[, header_name[, continuation_ws[, errors]]]]]]) 52 53 Create a MIME-compliant header that can contain strings in different character 54 sets. 55 56 Optional *s* is the initial header value. If ``None`` (the default), the 57 initial header value is not set. You can later append to the header with 58 :meth:`append` method calls. *s* may be a byte string or a Unicode string, but 59 see the :meth:`append` documentation for semantics. 60 61 Optional *charset* serves two purposes: it has the same meaning as the *charset* 62 argument to the :meth:`append` method. It also sets the default character set 63 for all subsequent :meth:`append` calls that omit the *charset* argument. If 64 *charset* is not provided in the constructor (the default), the ``us-ascii`` 65 character set is used both as *s*'s initial charset and as the default for 66 subsequent :meth:`append` calls. 67 68 The maximum line length can be specified explicitly via *maxlinelen*. For 69 splitting the first line to a shorter value (to account for the field header 70 which isn't included in *s*, e.g. :mailheader:`Subject`) pass in the name of the 71 field in *header_name*. The default *maxlinelen* is 76, and the default value 72 for *header_name* is ``None``, meaning it is not taken into account for the 73 first line of a long, split header. 74 75 Optional *continuation_ws* must be :rfc:`2822`\ -compliant folding whitespace, 76 and is usually either a space or a hard tab character. This character will be 77 prepended to continuation lines. *continuation_ws* defaults to a single 78 space character (" "). 79 80 Optional *errors* is passed straight through to the :meth:`append` method. 81 82 83 .. method:: append(s[, charset[, errors]]) 84 85 Append the string *s* to the MIME header. 86 87 Optional *charset*, if given, should be a :class:`~email.charset.Charset` 88 instance (see :mod:`email.charset`) or the name of a character set, which 89 will be converted to a :class:`~email.charset.Charset` instance. A value 90 of ``None`` (the default) means that the *charset* given in the constructor 91 is used. 92 93 *s* may be a byte string or a Unicode string. If it is a byte string 94 (i.e. ``isinstance(s, str)`` is true), then *charset* is the encoding of 95 that byte string, and a :exc:`UnicodeError` will be raised if the string 96 cannot be decoded with that character set. 97 98 If *s* is a Unicode string, then *charset* is a hint specifying the 99 character set of the characters in the string. In this case, when 100 producing an :rfc:`2822`\ -compliant header using :rfc:`2047` rules, the 101 Unicode string will be encoded using the following charsets in order: 102 ``us-ascii``, the *charset* hint, ``utf-8``. The first character set to 103 not provoke a :exc:`UnicodeError` is used. 104 105 Optional *errors* is passed through to any :func:`unicode` or 106 :meth:`unicode.encode` call, and defaults to "strict". 107 108 109 .. method:: encode([splitchars]) 110 111 Encode a message header into an RFC-compliant format, possibly wrapping 112 long lines and encapsulating non-ASCII parts in base64 or quoted-printable 113 encodings. Optional *splitchars* is a string containing characters to 114 split long ASCII lines on, in rough support of :rfc:`2822`'s *highest 115 level syntactic breaks*. This doesn't affect :rfc:`2047` encoded lines. 116 117 The :class:`Header` class also provides a number of methods to support 118 standard operators and built-in functions. 119 120 121 .. method:: __str__() 122 123 A synonym for :meth:`Header.encode`. Useful for ``str(aHeader)``. 124 125 126 .. method:: __unicode__() 127 128 A helper for the built-in :func:`unicode` function. Returns the header as 129 a Unicode string. 130 131 132 .. method:: __eq__(other) 133 134 This method allows you to compare two :class:`Header` instances for 135 equality. 136 137 138 .. method:: __ne__(other) 139 140 This method allows you to compare two :class:`Header` instances for 141 inequality. 142 143The :mod:`email.header` module also provides the following convenient functions. 144 145 146.. function:: decode_header(header) 147 148 Decode a message header value without converting the character set. The header 149 value is in *header*. 150 151 This function returns a list of ``(decoded_string, charset)`` pairs containing 152 each of the decoded parts of the header. *charset* is ``None`` for non-encoded 153 parts of the header, otherwise a lower case string containing the name of the 154 character set specified in the encoded string. 155 156 Here's an example:: 157 158 >>> from email.header import decode_header 159 >>> decode_header('=?iso-8859-1?q?p=F6stal?=') 160 [('p\xf6stal', 'iso-8859-1')] 161 162 163.. function:: make_header(decoded_seq[, maxlinelen[, header_name[, continuation_ws]]]) 164 165 Create a :class:`Header` instance from a sequence of pairs as returned by 166 :func:`decode_header`. 167 168 :func:`decode_header` takes a header value string and returns a sequence of 169 pairs of the format ``(decoded_string, charset)`` where *charset* is the name of 170 the character set. 171 172 This function takes one of those sequence of pairs and returns a :class:`Header` 173 instance. Optional *maxlinelen*, *header_name*, and *continuation_ws* are as in 174 the :class:`Header` constructor. 175 176