email.charset
: Representing character sets¶Source code: Lib/email/charset.py
This module is part of the legacy (Compat32
) email API. In the new
API only the aliases table is used.
The remaining text in this section is the original documentation of the module.
This module provides a class Charset
for representing character sets
and character set conversions in email messages, as well as a character set
registry and several convenience methods for manipulating this registry.
Instances of Charset
are used in several other modules within the
email
package.
Import this class from the email.charset
module.
email.charset.
Charset
(input_charset=DEFAULT_CHARSET)¶Map character sets to their email properties.
This class provides information about the requirements imposed on email for a specific character set. It also provides convenience routines for converting between character sets, given the availability of the applicable codecs. Given a character set, it will do its best to provide information on how to use that character set in an email message in an RFC-compliant way.
Certain character sets must be encoded with quoted-printable or base64 when used in email headers or bodies. Certain character sets must be converted outright, and are not allowed in email.
Optional input_charset is as described below; it is always coerced to lower
case. After being alias normalized it is also used as a lookup into the
registry of character sets to find out the header encoding, body encoding, and
output conversion codec to be used for the character set. For example, if
input_charset is iso-8859-1
, then headers and bodies will be encoded using
quoted-printable and no output conversion codec is necessary. If
input_charset is euc-jp
, then headers will be encoded with base64, bodies
will not be encoded, but output text will be converted from the euc-jp
character set to the iso-2022-jp
character set.
Charset
instances have the following data attributes:
input_charset
¶The initial character set specified. Common aliases are converted to
their official email names (e.g. latin_1
is converted to
iso-8859-1
). Defaults to 7-bit us-ascii
.
header_encoding
¶If the character set must be encoded before it can be used in an email
header, this attribute will be set to Charset.QP
(for
quoted-printable), Charset.BASE64
(for base64 encoding), or
Charset.SHORTEST
for the shortest of QP or BASE64 encoding. Otherwise,
it will be None
.
body_encoding
¶Same as header_encoding, but describes the encoding for the mail
message’s body, which indeed may be different than the header encoding.
Charset.SHORTEST
is not allowed for body_encoding.
output_charset
¶Some character sets must be converted before they can be used in email
headers or bodies. If the input_charset is one of them, this attribute
will contain the name of the character set output will be converted to.
Otherwise, it will be None
.
input_codec
¶The name of the Python codec used to convert the input_charset to
Unicode. If no conversion codec is necessary, this attribute will be
None
.
output_codec
¶The name of the Python codec used to convert Unicode to the output_charset. If no conversion codec is necessary, this attribute will have the same value as the input_codec.
Charset
instances also have the following methods:
get_body_encoding
()¶Return the content transfer encoding used for body encoding.
This is either the string quoted-printable
or base64
depending on
the encoding used, or it is a function, in which case you should call the
function with a single argument, the Message object being encoded. The
function should then set the Content-Transfer-Encoding
header itself to whatever is appropriate.
Returns the string quoted-printable
if body_encoding is QP
,
returns the string base64
if body_encoding is BASE64
, and
returns the string 7bit
otherwise.
get_output_charset
()¶Return the output character set.
This is the output_charset attribute if that is not None
, otherwise
it is input_charset.
header_encode
(string)¶Header-encode the string string.
The type of encoding (base64 or quoted-printable) will be based on the header_encoding attribute.
header_encode_lines
(string, maxlengths)¶Header-encode a string by converting it first to bytes.
This is similar to header_encode()
except that the string is fit
into maximum line lengths as given by the argument maxlengths, which
must be an iterator: each element returned from this iterator will provide
the next maximum line length.
body_encode
(string)¶Body-encode the string string.
The type of encoding (base64 or quoted-printable) will be based on the body_encoding attribute.
The Charset
class also provides a number of methods to support
standard operations and built-in functions.
__str__
()¶Returns input_charset as a string coerced to lower
case. __repr__()
is an alias for __str__()
.
The email.charset
module also provides the following functions for adding
new entries to the global character set, alias, and codec registries:
email.charset.
add_charset
(charset, header_enc=None, body_enc=None, output_charset=None)¶Add character properties to the global registry.
charset is the input character set, and must be the canonical name of a character set.
Optional header_enc and body_enc is either Charset.QP
for
quoted-printable, Charset.BASE64
for base64 encoding,
Charset.SHORTEST
for the shortest of quoted-printable or base64 encoding,
or None
for no encoding. SHORTEST
is only valid for
header_enc. The default is None
for no encoding.
Optional output_charset is the character set that the output should be in.
Conversions will proceed from input charset, to Unicode, to the output charset
when the method Charset.convert()
is called. The default is to output in
the same character set as the input.
Both input_charset and output_charset must have Unicode codec entries in the
module’s character set-to-codec mapping; use add_codec()
to add codecs the
module does not know about. See the codecs
module’s documentation for
more information.
The global character set registry is kept in the module global dictionary
CHARSETS
.
email.charset.
add_alias
(alias, canonical)¶Add a character set alias. alias is the alias name, e.g. latin-1
.
canonical is the character set’s canonical name, e.g. iso-8859-1
.
The global charset alias registry is kept in the module global dictionary
ALIASES
.