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Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

Debian 6.0.6

(Squeeze)

Mail::Address(3pm)


Mail::Address

Mail::Address

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
METHODS
SEE ALSO
AUTHORS
LICENSE

NAME

Mail::Address − Parse mail addresses

SYNOPSIS

 use Mail::Address;
 my @addrs = Mail::Address−>parse($line);
 foreach $addr (@addrs) {
     print $addr−>format,"\n";
 }

DESCRIPTION

"Mail::Address" extracts and manipulates email addresses from a message header. It cannot be used to extract addresses from some random text. You can use this module to create RFC822 compliant fields.

Although "Mail::Address" is a very popular subject for books, and is used in many applications, it does a very poor job on the more complex message fields. It does only handle simple address formats (which covers about 95% of what can be found). Problems are with

no support for address groups, even not with the semi-colon as separator between addresses;

limitted support for escapes in phrases and comments. There are cases where it can get wrong; and

you have to take care of most escaping when you create an address yourself: "Mail::Address" does not do that for you.

Often requests are made to the maintainers of this code improve this situation, but this is not a good idea, where it will break zillions of existing applications. If you wish for a fully RFC2822 compliant implementation you may take a look at Mail::Message::Field::Full, part of MailBox.

example:

  my $s = Mail::Message::Field::Full−>parse($header);
  # ref $s isa Mail::Message::Field::Addresses;
  my @g = $s−>groups;          # all groups, at least one
  # ref $g[0] isa Mail::Message::Field::AddrGroup;
  my $ga = $g[0]−>addresses;   # group addresses
  my @a = $s−>addresses;       # all addresses
  # ref $a[0] isa Mail::Message::Field::Address;

METHODS

Constructors
Mail::Address−>new( PHRASE , ADDRESS , [ COMMENT ])

Create a new "Mail::Address" object which represents an address with the elements given. In a message these 3 elements would be seen like:

 PHRASE <ADDRESS> (COMMENT)
 ADDRESS (COMMENT)

example:

 Mail::Address−>new("Perl5 Porters", "perl5−porters@africa.nicoh.com");

$obj−>parse( LINE )

Parse the given line a return a list of extracted "Mail::Address" objects. The line would normally be one taken from a To,Cc or Bcc line in a message

example:

 my @addr = Mail::Address−>parse($line);

Accessors
$obj
−>address

Return the address part of the object.

$obj−>comment

Return the comment part of the object

$obj−>format([ADDRESSes])

Return a string representing the address in a suitable form to be placed on a "To", "Cc", or "Bcc" line of a message. This method is called on the first ADDRESS to be used; other specified ADDRESSes will be appended, separated with commas.

$obj−>phrase

Return the phrase part of the object.

Smart accessors
$obj
−>host

Return the address excluding the user id and ’@’

$obj−>name

Using the information contained within the object attempt to identify what the person or groups name is.

$obj−>user

Return the address excluding the ’@’ and the mail domain

SEE ALSO

This module is part of the MailTools distribution, http://perl.overmeer.net/mailtools/.

AUTHORS

The MailTools bundle was developed by Graham Barr. Later, Mark Overmeer took over maintenance without commitment to further development.

Mail::Cap by Gisle Aas <aas@oslonett.no>. Mail::Field::AddrList by Peter Orbaek <poe@cit.dk>. Mail::Mailer and Mail::Send by Tim Bunce <Tim.Bunce@ig.co.uk>. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

LICENSE

Copyrights 1995−2000 Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com> and 2001−2007 Mark Overmeer <perl@overmeer.net>.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html



Mail::Address(3pm)