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1 package MIME::QuotedPrint; 2 3 # $Id: QuotedPrint.pm,v 3.7 2005/11/29 20:49:46 gisle Exp $ 4 5 use strict; 6 use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT $VERSION); 7 8 require Exporter; 9 @ISA = qw(Exporter); 10 @EXPORT = qw(encode_qp decode_qp); 11 12 $VERSION = "3.07"; 13 14 use MIME::Base64; # will load XS version of {en,de}code_qp() 15 16 *encode = \&encode_qp; 17 *decode = \&decode_qp; 18 19 1; 20 21 __END__ 22 23 =head1 NAME 24 25 MIME::QuotedPrint - Encoding and decoding of quoted-printable strings 26 27 =head1 SYNOPSIS 28 29 use MIME::QuotedPrint; 30 31 $encoded = encode_qp($decoded); 32 $decoded = decode_qp($encoded); 33 34 =head1 DESCRIPTION 35 36 This module provides functions to encode and decode strings into and from the 37 quoted-printable encoding specified in RFC 2045 - I<MIME (Multipurpose 38 Internet Mail Extensions)>. The quoted-printable encoding is intended 39 to represent data that largely consists of bytes that correspond to 40 printable characters in the ASCII character set. Each non-printable 41 character (as defined by English Americans) is represented by a 42 triplet consisting of the character "=" followed by two hexadecimal 43 digits. 44 45 The following functions are provided: 46 47 =over 4 48 49 =item encode_qp($str) 50 51 =item encode_qp($str, $eol) 52 53 =item encode_qp($str, $eol, $binmode) 54 55 This function returns an encoded version of the string ($str) given as 56 argument. 57 58 The second argument ($eol) is the line-ending sequence to use. It is 59 optional and defaults to "\n". Every occurrence of "\n" is replaced 60 with this string, and it is also used for additional "soft line 61 breaks" to ensure that no line end up longer than 76 characters. Pass 62 it as "\015\012" to produce data suitable for external consumption. 63 The string "\r\n" produces the same result on many platforms, but not 64 all. 65 66 The third argument ($binmode) will select binary mode if passed as a 67 TRUE value. In binary mode "\n" will be encoded in the same way as 68 any other non-printable character. This ensures that a decoder will 69 end up with exactly the same string whatever line ending sequence it 70 uses. In general it is preferable to use the base64 encoding for 71 binary data; see L<MIME::Base64>. 72 73 An $eol of "" (the empty string) is special. In this case, no "soft 74 line breaks" are introduced and binary mode is effectively enabled so 75 that any "\n" in the original data is encoded as well. 76 77 =item decode_qp($str); 78 79 This function returns the plain text version of the string given 80 as argument. The lines of the result are "\n" terminated, even if 81 the $str argument contains "\r\n" terminated lines. 82 83 =back 84 85 86 If you prefer not to import these routines into your namespace, you can 87 call them as: 88 89 use MIME::QuotedPrint (); 90 $encoded = MIME::QuotedPrint::encode($decoded); 91 $decoded = MIME::QuotedPrint::decode($encoded); 92 93 Perl v5.8 and better allow extended Unicode characters in strings. 94 Such strings cannot be encoded directly, as the quoted-printable 95 encoding is only defined for single-byte characters. The solution is 96 to use the Encode module to select the byte encoding you want. For 97 example: 98 99 use MIME::QuotedPrint qw(encode_qp); 100 use Encode qw(encode); 101 102 $encoded = encode_qp(encode("UTF-8", "\x{FFFF}\n")); 103 print $encoded; 104 105 =head1 COPYRIGHT 106 107 Copyright 1995-1997,2002-2004 Gisle Aas. 108 109 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 110 modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. 111 112 =head1 SEE ALSO 113 114 L<MIME::Base64> 115 116 =cut
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