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% This document is largely a stub used to allow the email package docs
% to be formatted separately from the rest of the Python
% documentation. This allows the documentation to be released
% independently of the rest of Python since the email package is being
% maintained for multiple Python versions, and on an accelerated
% schedule.
\documentclass{howto}
\title{email Package Reference}
\author{Barry Warsaw}
\authoraddress{\email{barry@python.org}}
\date{\today}
\release{4.0} % software release, not documentation
\setreleaseinfo{} % empty for final release
\setshortversion{4.0} % major.minor only for software
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\begin{abstract}
The \module{email} package provides classes and utilities to create,
parse, generate, and modify email messages, conforming to all the
relevant email and MIME related RFCs.
\end{abstract}
% The ugly "%begin{latexonly}" pseudo-environment suppresses the table
% of contents for HTML generation.
%
%begin{latexonly}
\tableofcontents
%end{latexonly}
\section{Introduction}
The \module{email} package provides classes and utilities to create,
parse, generate, and modify email messages, conforming to all the
relevant email and MIME related RFCs.
This document describes version 4.0 of the \module{email} package, which is
distributed with Python 2.5 and is available as a standalone distutils-based
package for use with earlier Python versions. \module{email} 4.0 is not
compatible with Python versions earlier than 2.3. For more information about
the \module{email} package, including download links and mailing lists, see
\ulink{Python's email SIG}{http://www.python.org/sigs/email-sig}.
The documentation that follows was written for the Python project, so
if you're reading this as part of the standalone \module{email}
package documentation, there are a few notes to be aware of:
\begin{itemize}
\item Deprecation and ``version added'' notes are relative to the
Python version a feature was added or deprecated. See
the package history in section \ref{email-pkg-history} for details.
\item If you're reading this documentation as part of the
standalone \module{email} package, some of the internal links to
other sections of the Python standard library may not resolve.
\end{itemize}
\input{email}
\end{document}