| \declaremodule{standard}{email.Message} |
| \modulesynopsis{The base class representing email messages.} |
| |
| The central class in the \module{email} package is the |
| \class{Message} class; it is the base class for the \module{email} |
| object model. \class{Message} provides the core functionality for |
| setting and querying header fields, and for accessing message bodies. |
| |
| Conceptually, a \class{Message} object consists of \emph{headers} and |
| \emph{payloads}. Headers are \rfc{2822} style field names and |
| values where the field name and value are separated by a colon. The |
| colon is not part of either the field name or the field value. |
| |
| Headers are stored and returned in case-preserving form but are |
| matched case-insensitively. There may also be a single envelope |
| header, also known as the \emph{Unix-From} header or the |
| \code{From_} header. The payload is either a string in the case of |
| simple message objects or a list of \class{Message} objects for |
| MIME container documents (e.g. \mimetype{multipart/*} and |
| \mimetype{message/rfc822}). |
| |
| \class{Message} objects provide a mapping style interface for |
| accessing the message headers, and an explicit interface for accessing |
| both the headers and the payload. It provides convenience methods for |
| generating a flat text representation of the message object tree, for |
| accessing commonly used header parameters, and for recursively walking |
| over the object tree. |
| |
| Here are the methods of the \class{Message} class: |
| |
| \begin{classdesc}{Message}{} |
| The constructor takes no arguments. |
| \end{classdesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{as_string}{\optional{unixfrom}} |
| Return the entire message flatten as a string. When optional |
| \var{unixfrom} is \code{True}, the envelope header is included in the |
| returned string. \var{unixfrom} defaults to \code{False}. |
| |
| Note that this method is provided as a convenience and may not always |
| format the message the way you want. For more flexibility, |
| instantiate a \class{Generator} instance and use its |
| \method{flatten()} method directly. For example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| from cStringIO import StringIO |
| from email.Generator import Generator |
| fp = StringIO() |
| g = Generator(fp, mangle_from_=False, maxheaderlen=60) |
| g.flatten(msg) |
| text = fp.getvalue() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__str__}{} |
| Equivalent to \method{as_string(unixfrom=True)}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{is_multipart}{} |
| Return \code{True} if the message's payload is a list of |
| sub-\class{Message} objects, otherwise return \code{False}. When |
| \method{is_multipart()} returns False, the payload should be a string |
| object. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_unixfrom}{unixfrom} |
| Set the message's envelope header to \var{unixfrom}, which should be a string. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_unixfrom}{} |
| Return the message's envelope header. Defaults to \code{None} if the |
| envelope header was never set. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{attach}{payload} |
| Add the given \var{payload} to the current payload, which must be |
| \code{None} or a list of \class{Message} objects before the call. |
| After the call, the payload will always be a list of \class{Message} |
| objects. If you want to set the payload to a scalar object (e.g. a |
| string), use \method{set_payload()} instead. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_payload}{\optional{i\optional{, decode}}} |
| Return a reference the current payload, which will be a list of |
| \class{Message} objects when \method{is_multipart()} is \code{True}, or a |
| string when \method{is_multipart()} is \code{False}. If the |
| payload is a list and you mutate the list object, you modify the |
| message's payload in place. |
| |
| With optional argument \var{i}, \method{get_payload()} will return the |
| \var{i}-th element of the payload, counting from zero, if |
| \method{is_multipart()} is \code{True}. An \exception{IndexError} |
| will be raised if \var{i} is less than 0 or greater than or equal to |
| the number of items in the payload. If the payload is a string |
| (i.e. \method{is_multipart()} is \code{False}) and \var{i} is given, a |
| \exception{TypeError} is raised. |
| |
| Optional \var{decode} is a flag indicating whether the payload should be |
| decoded or not, according to the \mailheader{Content-Transfer-Encoding} header. |
| When \code{True} and the message is not a multipart, the payload will be |
| decoded if this header's value is \samp{quoted-printable} or |
| \samp{base64}. If some other encoding is used, or |
| \mailheader{Content-Transfer-Encoding} header is |
| missing, or if the payload has bogus base64 data, the payload is |
| returned as-is (undecoded). If the message is a multipart and the |
| \var{decode} flag is \code{True}, then \code{None} is returned. The |
| default for \var{decode} is \code{False}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_payload}{payload\optional{, charset}} |
| Set the entire message object's payload to \var{payload}. It is the |
| client's responsibility to ensure the payload invariants. Optional |
| \var{charset} sets the message's default character set; see |
| \method{set_charset()} for details. |
| |
| \versionchanged[\var{charset} argument added]{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_charset}{charset} |
| Set the character set of the payload to \var{charset}, which can |
| either be a \class{Charset} instance (see \refmodule{email.Charset}), a |
| string naming a character set, |
| or \code{None}. If it is a string, it will be converted to a |
| \class{Charset} instance. If \var{charset} is \code{None}, the |
| \code{charset} parameter will be removed from the |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header. Anything else will generate a |
| \exception{TypeError}. |
| |
| The message will be assumed to be of type \mimetype{text/*} encoded with |
| \code{charset.input_charset}. It will be converted to |
| \code{charset.output_charset} |
| and encoded properly, if needed, when generating the plain text |
| representation of the message. MIME headers |
| (\mailheader{MIME-Version}, \mailheader{Content-Type}, |
| \mailheader{Content-Transfer-Encoding}) will be added as needed. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_charset}{} |
| Return the \class{Charset} instance associated with the message's payload. |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| The following methods implement a mapping-like interface for accessing |
| the message's \rfc{2822} headers. Note that there are some |
| semantic differences between these methods and a normal mapping |
| (i.e. dictionary) interface. For example, in a dictionary there are |
| no duplicate keys, but here there may be duplicate message headers. Also, |
| in dictionaries there is no guaranteed order to the keys returned by |
| \method{keys()}, but in a \class{Message} object, headers are always |
| returned in the order they appeared in the original message, or were |
| added to the message later. Any header deleted and then re-added are |
| always appended to the end of the header list. |
| |
| These semantic differences are intentional and are biased toward |
| maximal convenience. |
| |
| Note that in all cases, any envelope header present in the message is |
| not included in the mapping interface. |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__len__}{} |
| Return the total number of headers, including duplicates. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__contains__}{name} |
| Return true if the message object has a field named \var{name}. |
| Matching is done case-insensitively and \var{name} should not include the |
| trailing colon. Used for the \code{in} operator, |
| e.g.: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| if 'message-id' in myMessage: |
| print 'Message-ID:', myMessage['message-id'] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__getitem__}{name} |
| Return the value of the named header field. \var{name} should not |
| include the colon field separator. If the header is missing, |
| \code{None} is returned; a \exception{KeyError} is never raised. |
| |
| Note that if the named field appears more than once in the message's |
| headers, exactly which of those field values will be returned is |
| undefined. Use the \method{get_all()} method to get the values of all |
| the extant named headers. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__setitem__}{name, val} |
| Add a header to the message with field name \var{name} and value |
| \var{val}. The field is appended to the end of the message's existing |
| fields. |
| |
| Note that this does \emph{not} overwrite or delete any existing header |
| with the same name. If you want to ensure that the new header is the |
| only one present in the message with field name |
| \var{name}, delete the field first, e.g.: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| del msg['subject'] |
| msg['subject'] = 'Python roolz!' |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{__delitem__}{name} |
| Delete all occurrences of the field with name \var{name} from the |
| message's headers. No exception is raised if the named field isn't |
| present in the headers. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{has_key}{name} |
| Return true if the message contains a header field named \var{name}, |
| otherwise return false. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{keys}{} |
| Return a list of all the message's header field names. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{values}{} |
| Return a list of all the message's field values. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{items}{} |
| Return a list of 2-tuples containing all the message's field headers |
| and values. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get}{name\optional{, failobj}} |
| Return the value of the named header field. This is identical to |
| \method{__getitem__()} except that optional \var{failobj} is returned |
| if the named header is missing (defaults to \code{None}). |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| Here are some additional useful methods: |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_all}{name\optional{, failobj}} |
| Return a list of all the values for the field named \var{name}. |
| If there are no such named headers in the message, \var{failobj} is |
| returned (defaults to \code{None}). |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{add_header}{_name, _value, **_params} |
| Extended header setting. This method is similar to |
| \method{__setitem__()} except that additional header parameters can be |
| provided as keyword arguments. \var{_name} is the header field to add |
| and \var{_value} is the \emph{primary} value for the header. |
| |
| For each item in the keyword argument dictionary \var{_params}, the |
| key is taken as the parameter name, with underscores converted to |
| dashes (since dashes are illegal in Python identifiers). Normally, |
| the parameter will be added as \code{key="value"} unless the value is |
| \code{None}, in which case only the key will be added. |
| |
| Here's an example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| msg.add_header('Content-Disposition', 'attachment', filename='bud.gif') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| This will add a header that looks like |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="bud.gif" |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{replace_header}{_name, _value} |
| Replace a header. Replace the first header found in the message that |
| matches \var{_name}, retaining header order and field name case. If |
| no matching header was found, a \exception{KeyError} is raised. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_content_type}{} |
| Return the message's content type. The returned string is coerced to |
| lower case of the form \mimetype{maintype/subtype}. If there was no |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header in the message the default type as |
| given by \method{get_default_type()} will be returned. Since |
| according to \rfc{2045}, messages always have a default type, |
| \method{get_content_type()} will always return a value. |
| |
| \rfc{2045} defines a message's default type to be |
| \mimetype{text/plain} unless it appears inside a |
| \mimetype{multipart/digest} container, in which case it would be |
| \mimetype{message/rfc822}. If the \mailheader{Content-Type} header |
| has an invalid type specification, \rfc{2045} mandates that the |
| default type be \mimetype{text/plain}. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_content_maintype}{} |
| Return the message's main content type. This is the |
| \mimetype{maintype} part of the string returned by |
| \method{get_content_type()}. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_content_subtype}{} |
| Return the message's sub-content type. This is the \mimetype{subtype} |
| part of the string returned by \method{get_content_type()}. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_default_type}{} |
| Return the default content type. Most messages have a default content |
| type of \mimetype{text/plain}, except for messages that are subparts |
| of \mimetype{multipart/digest} containers. Such subparts have a |
| default content type of \mimetype{message/rfc822}. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_default_type}{ctype} |
| Set the default content type. \var{ctype} should either be |
| \mimetype{text/plain} or \mimetype{message/rfc822}, although this is |
| not enforced. The default content type is not stored in the |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_params}{\optional{failobj\optional{, |
| header\optional{, unquote}}}} |
| Return the message's \mailheader{Content-Type} parameters, as a list. The |
| elements of the returned list are 2-tuples of key/value pairs, as |
| split on the \character{=} sign. The left hand side of the |
| \character{=} is the key, while the right hand side is the value. If |
| there is no \character{=} sign in the parameter the value is the empty |
| string, otherwise the value is as described in \method{get_param()} and is |
| unquoted if optional \var{unquote} is \code{True} (the default). |
| |
| Optional \var{failobj} is the object to return if there is no |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header. Optional \var{header} is the header to |
| search instead of \mailheader{Content-Type}. |
| |
| \versionchanged[\var{unquote} argument added]{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_param}{param\optional{, |
| failobj\optional{, header\optional{, unquote}}}} |
| Return the value of the \mailheader{Content-Type} header's parameter |
| \var{param} as a string. If the message has no \mailheader{Content-Type} |
| header or if there is no such parameter, then \var{failobj} is |
| returned (defaults to \code{None}). |
| |
| Optional \var{header} if given, specifies the message header to use |
| instead of \mailheader{Content-Type}. |
| |
| Parameter keys are always compared case insensitively. The return |
| value can either be a string, or a 3-tuple if the parameter was |
| \rfc{2231} encoded. When it's a 3-tuple, the elements of the value are of |
| the form \code{(CHARSET, LANGUAGE, VALUE)}. Note that both \code{CHARSET} and |
| \code{LANGUAGE} can be \code{None}, in which case you should consider |
| \code{VALUE} to be encoded in the \code{us-ascii} charset. You can |
| usually ignore \code{LANGUAGE}. |
| |
| Your application should be prepared to deal with 3-tuple return |
| values, and can convert the parameter to a Unicode string like so: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| param = msg.get_param('foo') |
| if isinstance(param, tuple): |
| param = unicode(param[2], param[0] or 'us-ascii') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| In any case, the parameter value (either the returned string, or the |
| \code{VALUE} item in the 3-tuple) is always unquoted, unless |
| \var{unquote} is set to \code{False}. |
| |
| \versionchanged[\var{unquote} argument added, and 3-tuple return value |
| possible]{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_param}{param, value\optional{, |
| header\optional{, requote\optional{, charset\optional{, language}}}}} |
| |
| Set a parameter in the \mailheader{Content-Type} header. If the |
| parameter already exists in the header, its value will be replaced |
| with \var{value}. If the \mailheader{Content-Type} header as not yet |
| been defined for this message, it will be set to \mimetype{text/plain} |
| and the new parameter value will be appended as per \rfc{2045}. |
| |
| Optional \var{header} specifies an alternative header to |
| \mailheader{Content-Type}, and all parameters will be quoted as |
| necessary unless optional \var{requote} is \code{False} (the default |
| is \code{True}). |
| |
| If optional \var{charset} is specified, the parameter will be encoded |
| according to \rfc{2231}. Optional \var{language} specifies the RFC |
| 2231 language, defaulting to the empty string. Both \var{charset} and |
| \var{language} should be strings. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{del_param}{param\optional{, header\optional{, |
| requote}}} |
| Remove the given parameter completely from the |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header. The header will be re-written in |
| place without the parameter or its value. All values will be quoted |
| as necessary unless \var{requote} is \code{False} (the default is |
| \code{True}). Optional \var{header} specifies an alternative to |
| \mailheader{Content-Type}. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_type}{type\optional{, header}\optional{, |
| requote}} |
| Set the main type and subtype for the \mailheader{Content-Type} |
| header. \var{type} must be a string in the form |
| \mimetype{maintype/subtype}, otherwise a \exception{ValueError} is |
| raised. |
| |
| This method replaces the \mailheader{Content-Type} header, keeping all |
| the parameters in place. If \var{requote} is \code{False}, this |
| leaves the existing header's quoting as is, otherwise the parameters |
| will be quoted (the default). |
| |
| An alternative header can be specified in the \var{header} argument. |
| When the \mailheader{Content-Type} header is set a |
| \mailheader{MIME-Version} header is also added. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_filename}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the value of the \code{filename} parameter of the |
| \mailheader{Content-Disposition} header of the message, or \var{failobj} if |
| either the header is missing, or has no \code{filename} parameter. |
| The returned string will always be unquoted as per |
| \method{Utils.unquote()}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_boundary}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the value of the \code{boundary} parameter of the |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header of the message, or \var{failobj} if either |
| the header is missing, or has no \code{boundary} parameter. The |
| returned string will always be unquoted as per |
| \method{Utils.unquote()}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{set_boundary}{boundary} |
| Set the \code{boundary} parameter of the \mailheader{Content-Type} |
| header to \var{boundary}. \method{set_boundary()} will always quote |
| \var{boundary} if necessary. A \exception{HeaderParseError} is raised |
| if the message object has no \mailheader{Content-Type} header. |
| |
| Note that using this method is subtly different than deleting the old |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header and adding a new one with the new boundary |
| via \method{add_header()}, because \method{set_boundary()} preserves the |
| order of the \mailheader{Content-Type} header in the list of headers. |
| However, it does \emph{not} preserve any continuation lines which may |
| have been present in the original \mailheader{Content-Type} header. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_content_charset}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the \code{charset} parameter of the \mailheader{Content-Type} |
| header, coerced to lower case. If there is no |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header, or if that header has no |
| \code{charset} parameter, \var{failobj} is returned. |
| |
| Note that this method differs from \method{get_charset()} which |
| returns the \class{Charset} instance for the default encoding of the |
| message body. |
| |
| \versionadded{2.2.2} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_charsets}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return a list containing the character set names in the message. If |
| the message is a \mimetype{multipart}, then the list will contain one |
| element for each subpart in the payload, otherwise, it will be a list |
| of length 1. |
| |
| Each item in the list will be a string which is the value of the |
| \code{charset} parameter in the \mailheader{Content-Type} header for the |
| represented subpart. However, if the subpart has no |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header, no \code{charset} parameter, or is not of |
| the \mimetype{text} main MIME type, then that item in the returned list |
| will be \var{failobj}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{walk}{} |
| The \method{walk()} method is an all-purpose generator which can be |
| used to iterate over all the parts and subparts of a message object |
| tree, in depth-first traversal order. You will typically use |
| \method{walk()} as the iterator in a \code{for} loop; each |
| iteration returns the next subpart. |
| |
| Here's an example that prints the MIME type of every part of a |
| multipart message structure: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> for part in msg.walk(): |
| >>> print part.get_content_type() |
| multipart/report |
| text/plain |
| message/delivery-status |
| text/plain |
| text/plain |
| message/rfc822 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \class{Message} objects can also optionally contain two instance |
| attributes, which can be used when generating the plain text of a MIME |
| message. |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{preamble} |
| The format of a MIME document allows for some text between the blank |
| line following the headers, and the first multipart boundary string. |
| Normally, this text is never visible in a MIME-aware mail reader |
| because it falls outside the standard MIME armor. However, when |
| viewing the raw text of the message, or when viewing the message in a |
| non-MIME aware reader, this text can become visible. |
| |
| The \var{preamble} attribute contains this leading extra-armor text |
| for MIME documents. When the \class{Parser} discovers some text after |
| the headers but before the first boundary string, it assigns this text |
| to the message's \var{preamble} attribute. When the \class{Generator} |
| is writing out the plain text representation of a MIME message, and it |
| finds the message has a \var{preamble} attribute, it will write this |
| text in the area between the headers and the first boundary. See |
| \refmodule{email.Parser} and \refmodule{email.Generator} for details. |
| |
| Note that if the message object has no preamble, the |
| \var{preamble} attribute will be \code{None}. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{epilogue} |
| The \var{epilogue} attribute acts the same way as the \var{preamble} |
| attribute, except that it contains text that appears between the last |
| boundary and the end of the message. |
| |
| One note: when generating the flat text for a \mimetype{multipart} |
| message that has no \var{epilogue} (using the standard |
| \class{Generator} class), no newline is added after the closing |
| boundary line. If the message object has an \var{epilogue} and its |
| value does not start with a newline, a newline is printed after the |
| closing boundary. This seems a little clumsy, but it makes the most |
| practical sense. The upshot is that if you want to ensure that a |
| newline get printed after your closing \mimetype{multipart} boundary, |
| set the \var{epilogue} to the empty string. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \subsubsection{Deprecated methods} |
| |
| The following methods are deprecated in \module{email} version 2. |
| They are documented here for completeness. |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{add_payload}{payload} |
| Add \var{payload} to the message object's existing payload. If, prior |
| to calling this method, the object's payload was \code{None} |
| (i.e. never before set), then after this method is called, the payload |
| will be the argument \var{payload}. |
| |
| If the object's payload was already a list |
| (i.e. \method{is_multipart()} returns \code{True}), then \var{payload} is |
| appended to the end of the existing payload list. |
| |
| For any other type of existing payload, \method{add_payload()} will |
| transform the new payload into a list consisting of the old payload |
| and \var{payload}, but only if the document is already a MIME |
| multipart document. This condition is satisfied if the message's |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header's main type is either |
| \mimetype{multipart}, or there is no \mailheader{Content-Type} |
| header. In any other situation, |
| \exception{MultipartConversionError} is raised. |
| |
| \deprecated{2.2.2}{Use the \method{attach()} method instead.} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_type}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the message's content type, as a string of the form |
| \mimetype{maintype/subtype} as taken from the |
| \mailheader{Content-Type} header. |
| The returned string is coerced to lowercase. |
| |
| If there is no \mailheader{Content-Type} header in the message, |
| \var{failobj} is returned (defaults to \code{None}). |
| |
| \deprecated{2.2.2}{Use the \method{get_content_type()} method instead.} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_main_type}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the message's \emph{main} content type. This essentially returns the |
| \var{maintype} part of the string returned by \method{get_type()}, with the |
| same semantics for \var{failobj}. |
| |
| \deprecated{2.2.2}{Use the \method{get_content_maintype()} method instead.} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[Message]{get_subtype}{\optional{failobj}} |
| Return the message's sub-content type. This essentially returns the |
| \var{subtype} part of the string returned by \method{get_type()}, with the |
| same semantics for \var{failobj}. |
| |
| \deprecated{2.2.2}{Use the \method{get_content_subtype()} method instead.} |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |