Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Barry Warsaw 409a4c08b5 Sync'ing with standalone email package 2.0.1. This adds support for
non-us-ascii character sets in headers and bodies.  Some API changes
(with DeprecationWarnings for the old APIs).  Better RFC-compliant
implementations of base64 and quoted-printable.

Updated test cases.  Documentation updates to follow (after I finish
writing them ;).
2002-04-10 21:01:31 +00:00
Barry Warsaw c44d2c52c9 decode(), encode(): Accepting the minor optimizations from SF patch
#486375, but not the rest of it, since that changes the documented
semantics of encode().
2001-12-03 19:26:40 +00:00
Barry Warsaw e5739a69a7 formatdate(): Jason Mastaler correctly points out that divmod with a
negative modulus won't return the right values.  So always do positive
modulus on an absolute value and twiddle the sign as appropriate after
the fact.
2001-11-19 18:36:43 +00:00
Barry Warsaw cd45a36959 formatdate(): The calculation of the minutes part of the zone was
incorrect for "uneven" timezones.  This algorithm should work for even
timezones (e.g. America/New_York) and uneven timezones (e.g.
Australia/Adelaide and America/St_Johns).

Closes SF bug #483231.
2001-11-19 16:28:07 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 9aa6435398 Forgot to import time. 2001-11-09 17:45:48 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 9cff0e604a formatdate(): A better docstring. 2001-11-09 17:07:28 +00:00
Barry Warsaw aa79f4d492 formatdate(): An implementation to replace the one borrowed from
rfc822.py.  The old rfc822.formatdate() produced date strings using
obsolete syntax.  The new version produces the preferred RFC 2822
dates.

Also, an optional argument `localtime' is added, which if true,
produces a date relative to the local timezone, with daylight savings
time properly taken into account.
2001-11-09 16:59:56 +00:00
Barry Warsaw e968ead1dd Give me back my page breaks. 2001-10-04 17:05:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 527e64fd68 Whitespace normalization. 2001-10-04 05:36:56 +00:00
Barry Warsaw ba92580f01 The email package version 1.0, prototyped as mimelib
<http://sf.net/projects/mimelib>.  There /are/ API differences between
mimelib and email, but most of the implementations are shared (except
where cool Py2.2 stuff like generators are used).
2001-09-23 03:17:28 +00:00