DOKK / manpages / debian 12 / libmail-message-perl / Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup.3pm.en
Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup(3pm)

Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup - a sub set of fields in a header

 Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup
   is a Mail::Reporter
 Mail::Message::Head::FieldGroup is extended by
   Mail::Message::Head::ListGroup
   Mail::Message::Head::ResentGroup
   Mail::Message::Head::SpamGroup

Never instantiated directly.

Some fields have a combined meaning: a set of fields which represent one intermediate step during the transport of the message (a resent group, implemented in Mail::Message::Head::ResentGroup), fields added by mailing list software (implemented in Mail::Message::Head::ListGroup), or fields added by Spam detection related software (implemented by Mail::Message::Head::SpamGroup). Each set of fields can be extracted or added as group with objects which are based on the implementation in this class.

Extends "DESCRIPTION" in Mail::Reporter.

Extends "METHODS" in Mail::Reporter.

Extends "Constructors" in Mail::Reporter.

$obj->clone()
Make a copy of this object. The collected fieldnames are copied and the list type information. No deep copy is made for the header: this is only copied as reference.
$obj->from($head|$message)
Create a group of fields based on the specified $message or message $head. This may return one or more of the objects, which depends on the type of group. Mailing list fields are all stored in one object, where resent and spam groups can appear more than once.
$obj->implementedTypes()
Returns a list of strings containing all possible return values for type().
Construct an object which maintains one set of header $fields. The $fields may be specified as "Mail::Message::Field" objects or as key-value pairs. The %options and $fields (as key-value pair) can be mixed: they are distinguished by their name, where the fields always start with a capital. The field objects must aways lead the %options.

 -Option  --Defined in     --Default
  head                       undef
  log       Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
  software                   undef
  trace     Mail::Reporter   'WARNINGS'
  type                       undef
  version                    undef
    
The header HEAD object is used to store the grouped fields in. If no header is specified, a Mail::Message::Head::Partial is created for you. If you wish to scan the existing fields in a header, then use the from() method.
Name of the software which produced the fields.
Group name for the fields. Often the same, or close to the same STRING, as the "software" option contains.
Version number for the software which produced the fields.

$obj->add( <$field, $value> | $object )
Add a field to the header, using the field group. When the field group is already attached to a real message header, it will appear in that one as well as being registered in this set. If no header is defined, the field only appears internally.

example: adding a field to a detached list group

 my $this = Mail::Message::Head::ListGroup->new(...);
 $this->add('List-Id' => 'mailbox');
 $msg->addListGroup($this);
 $msg->send;
    

example: adding a field to an attached list group

 my $lg = Mail::Message::Head::ListGroup->from($msg);
 $lg->add('List-Id' => 'mailbox');
    
$obj->addFields( [$fieldnames] )
Add some $fieldnames to the set.
$obj->attach($head)
Add a group of fields to a message $head. The fields will be cloned(!) into the header, so that the field group object can be used again.

example: attaching a list group to a message

 my $lg = Mail::Message::Head::ListGroup->new(...);
 $lg->attach($msg->head);
 $msg->head->addListGroup($lg);   # same
 $msg->head->addSpamGroup($sg);   # also implemented with attach
    
$obj->delete()
Remove all the header lines which are combined in this fields group, from the header.
$obj->fieldNames()
Return the names of the fields which are used in this group.
$obj->fields()
Return the fields which are defined for this group.
$obj->head()
Returns the header object, which includes these fields.

$obj->software()
Returns the name of the software as is defined in the headers. The may be slightly different from the return value of type(), but usually not too different.
$obj->type()
Returns an abstract name for the field group; which software is controlling it. "undef" is returned in case the type is not known. Valid names are group type dependent: see the applicable manual pages. A list of all types can be retrieved with implementedTypes().
$obj->version()
Returns the version number of the software used to produce the fields. Some kinds of software do leave such a trace, other cases will return "undef"

$obj->collectFields( [$name] )
Scan the header for fields which are usually contained in field group with the specified $name. For mailinglist groups, you can not specify a $name: only one set of headers will be found (all headers are considered to be produced by exactly one package of mailinglist software).

This method is automatically called when a field group is constructed via from() on an existing header or message.

Returned are the names of the list header fields found, in scalar context the amount of fields. An empty list/zero indicates that there was no group to be found.

Please warn the author of MailBox if you see that to few or too many fields are included.

$obj->detected($type, $software, $version)
Sets the values for the field group type, software, and version, prossibly to "undef".

Extends "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter.

$obj->AUTOLOAD()
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->addReport($object)
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->defaultTrace( [$level]|[$loglevel, $tracelevel]|[$level, $callback] )
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->details()
Produce information about the detected/created field group, which may be helpful during debugging. A nicely formatted string is returned.
$obj->errors()
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->log( [$level, [$strings]] )
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->logPriority($level)
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->logSettings()
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->notImplemented()
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->print( [$fh] )
Print the group to the specified $fh or GLOB. This is probably only useful for debugging purposed. The output defaults to the selected file handle.
$obj->report( [$level] )
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->reportAll( [$level] )
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->trace( [$level] )
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->warnings()
Inherited, see "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter

Extends "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter.

$obj->DESTROY()
Inherited, see "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter

Fatal error: the specific package (or one of its superclasses) does not implement this method where it should. This message means that some other related classes do implement this method however the class at hand does not. Probably you should investigate this and probably inform the author of the package.

This module is part of Mail-Message distribution version 3.012, built on February 11, 2022. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/

Copyrights 2001-2022 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. 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://dev.perl.org/licenses/

2022-02-14 perl v5.34.0