There are several useful utilities provided with the email package.
(None, None)
is returned.
(realname, email_address)
and returns the string value suitable
for a To: or Cc: header. If the first element of
pair is false, then the second element is returned unmodified.
parseaddr()
. fieldvalues is a sequence of header field
values as might be returned by Message.getall(). Here's a
simple example that gets all the recipients of a message:
from email.Utils import getaddresses tos = msg.get_all('to', []) ccs = msg.get_all('cc', []) resent_tos = msg.get_all('resent-to', []) resent_ccs = msg.get_all('resent-cc', []) all_recipients = getaddresses(tos + ccs + resent_tos + resent_ccs)
encoding must be either the letter "q" for Quoted-Printable or "b" for Base64 encoding. If neither, a ValueError is raised. Both the charset and the encoding strings are case-insensitive, and coerced to lower case in the returned string.
"Mon, 20 Nov 1995 19:12:08 -0500"
. If it succeeds in parsing
the date, parsedate() returns a 9-tuple that can be passed
directly to time.mktime(); otherwise None
will be
returned. Note that fields 6, 7, and 8 of the result tuple are not
usable.
None
or a 10-tuple; the first 9 elements make up a tuple
that can be passed directly to time.mktime(), and the tenth
is the offset of the date's timezone from UTC (which is the official
term for Greenwich Mean Time)12.3. If the input
string has no timezone, the last element of the tuple returned is
None
. Note that fields 6, 7, and 8 of the result tuple are not
usable.
None
, assume
local time. Minor deficiency: mktime_tz() interprets the
first 8 elements of tuple as a local time and then compensates
for the timezone difference. This may yield a slight error around
changes in daylight savings time, though not worth worrying about for
common use.
Fri, 09 Nov 2001 01:08:47 -0000
Optional timeval if given is a floating point time value as accepted by time.gmtime() and time.localtime(), otherwise the current time is used.
Optional localtime is a flag that when true, interprets timeval, and returns a date relative to the local timezone instead of UTC, properly taking daylight savings time into account.
time.timezone
variable for the same timezone; the latter variable follows the
POSIX standard while this module follows RFC 2822.