NAME¶
MIME::Type - Definition of one MIME type
SYNOPSIS¶
use MIME::Types;
my $mimetypes = MIME::Types->new;
my MIME::Type $plaintext = $mimetypes->type('text/plain');
print $plaintext->mediaType; # text
print $plaintext->subType; # plain
my @ext = $plaintext->extensions;
print "@ext" # txt asc c cc h hh cpp
print $plaintext->encoding # 8bit
if($plaintext->isBinary) # false
if($plaintext->isAscii) # true
if($plaintext->equals('text/plain') {...}
if($plaintext eq 'text/plain') # same
print MIME::Type->simplified('x-appl/x-zip') # 'appl/zip'
DESCRIPTION¶
MIME types are used in MIME entities, for instance as part of e-mail and HTTP
traffic. Sometimes real knowledge about a mime-type is need. Objects of
"MIME::Type" store the information on one such type.
This module is built to conform to the MIME types of RFC's 2045 and 2231. It
follows the official IANA registry at
http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/ and the collection kept at
http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp
OVERLOADED¶
- overload: string comparison()
- When a MIME::Type object is compared to either a string or
another MIME::TYpe, the equals() method is called. Comparison is
smart, which means that it extends common string comparison with some
features which are defined in the related RFCs.
- overload: stringification()
- The stringification (use of the object in a place where a
string is required) will result in the type name, the same as
type() returns.
example: use of stringification
my $mime = MIME::Type->new('text/html');
print "$mime\n"; # explicit stringification
print $mime; # implicit stringification
METHODS¶
Initiation¶
- MIME::Type->new(OPTIONS)
- Create (instantiate) a new MIME::Type object which
manages one mime type.
-Option --Default
encoding <depends on type>
extensions []
simplified <derived from type>
system undef
type <required>
- encoding =>
'7bit'|'8bit'|'base64'|'quoted-printable'
- How must this data be encoded to be transported safely. The
default depends on the type: mimes with as main type "text/"
will default to "quoted-printable" and all other to
"base64".
- extensions => REF-ARRAY
- An array of extensions which are using this mime.
- simplified => STRING
- The mime types main- and sub-label can both start with
"x-", to indicate that is a non-registered name. Of course,
after registration this flag can disappear which adds to the confusion.
The simplified string has the "x-" thingies removed and are
translated to lower-case.
- system => REGEX
- Regular expression which defines for which systems this
rule is valid. The REGEX is matched on $^O.
- type => STRING
- The type which is defined here. It consists of a
type and a sub-type, both case-insensitive. This module will
return lower-case, but accept upper-case.
Attributes¶
- $obj->encoding()
- Returns the type of encoding which is required to transport
data of this type safely.
- $obj->extensions()
- Returns a list of extensions which are known to be used for
this mime type.
- $obj->simplified([STRING])
- MIME::Type->simplified([STRING])
- Returns the simplified mime type for this object or the
specified STRING. Mime type names can get officially registered. Until
then, they have to carry an "x-" preamble to indicate that. Of
course, after recognition, the "x-" can disappear. In many
cases, we prefer the simplified version of the type.
example: results of simplified()
my $mime = MIME::Type->new(type => 'x-appl/x-zip');
print $mime->simplified; # 'appl/zip'
print $mime->simplified('text/plain'); # 'text/plain'
print MIME::Type->simplified('x-xyz/x-abc'); # 'xyz/abc'
- $obj->system()
- Returns the regular expression which can be used to
determine whether this type is active on the system where you are working
on.
- $obj->type()
- Returns the long type of this object, for instance
'text/plain'
Knowledge¶
- $obj->equals(STRING|MIME)
- Compare this mime-type object with a STRING or other
object. In case of a STRING, simplification will take place.
- $obj->isAscii()
- Returns false when the encoding is base64, and true
otherwise. All encodings except base64 are text encodings.
- $obj->isBinary()
- Returns true when the encoding is base64.
- $obj->isRegistered()
- Mime-types which are not registered by IANA nor defined in
RFCs shall start with an "x-". This counts for as well the
media-type as the sub-type. In case either one of the types starts with
"x-" this method will return false.
- $obj->isSignature()
- Returns true when the type is in the list of known
signatures.
- $obj->mediaType()
- The media type of the simplified mime. For 'text/plain' it
will return 'text'.
For historical reasons, the 'mainType' method still can be used to retreive
the same value. However, that method is deprecated.
- $obj->subType()
- The sub type of the simplified mime. For 'text/plain' it
will return 'plain'.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
- Error: Type parameter is obligatory.
- When a MIME::Type object is created, the type itself must
be specified with the "type" option flag.
SEE ALSO¶
This module is part of MIME-Types distribution version 1.35, built on June 19,
2012. Website:
http://perl.overmeer.net/mimetypes/
LICENSE¶
Copyrights 1999,2001-2012 by [Mark Overmeer]. For other contributors see
ChangeLog.
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