cpython/Lib/email/__init__.py

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# Copyright (C) 2001,2002 Python Software Foundation
# Author: barry@zope.com (Barry Warsaw)
"""A package for parsing, handling, and generating email messages.
"""
__version__ = '2.4'
__all__ = ['Charset',
'Encoders',
'Errors',
'Generator',
'Header',
'Iterators',
'MIMEAudio',
'MIMEBase',
'MIMEImage',
'MIMEMessage',
'MIMEText',
'Message',
'Parser',
'Utils',
'base64MIME',
'quopriMIME',
'message_from_string',
'message_from_file',
]
try:
True, False
except NameError:
True = 1
False = 0
# Some convenience routines. Don't import Parser and Message as side-effects
# of importing email since those cascadingly import most of the rest of the
# email package.
def message_from_string(s, _class=None, strict=False):
"""Parse a string into a Message object model.
Optional _class and strict are passed to the Parser constructor.
"""
from email.Parser import Parser
if _class is None:
from email.Message import Message
_class = Message
return Parser(_class, strict=strict).parsestr(s)
def message_from_file(fp, _class=None, strict=False):
"""Read a file and parse its contents into a Message object model.
Optional _class and strict are passed to the Parser constructor.
"""
from email.Parser import Parser
if _class is None:
from email.Message import Message
_class = Message
return Parser(_class, strict=strict).parse(fp)
# Patch encodings.aliases to recognize 'ansi_x3.4_1968' which isn't a standard
# alias in Python 2.1.3, but is used by the email package test suite.
from encodings.aliases import aliases # The aliases dictionary
if not aliases.has_key('ansi_x3.4_1968'):
aliases['ansi_x3.4_1968'] = 'ascii'
del aliases # Not needed any more