view lisp/mail/rfc2368.el @ 32719:e6e8694bf692

Change .obj to .$(O) in all dependencies. ($(BLD)/casefiddle.$(O)): Remove compile command. ($(BLD)/gmalloc.$(O)): Remove compile command. ($(BLD)/dispnew.obj): ($(BLD)/keyboard.obj): ($(BLD)/w32inevt.obj): ($(BLD)/w32bdf.obj): ($(BLD)/alloc.obj): ($(BLD)/buffer.obj): ($(BLD)/editfns.obj): ($(BLD)/emacs.obj): ($(BLD)/fileio.obj): ($(BLD)/fns.obj): ($(BLD)/indent.obj): ($(BLD)/insdel.obj): ($(BLD)/intervals.obj): ($(BLD)/minibuf.obj): ($(BLD)/print.obj): ($(BLD)/scroll.obj): ($(BLD)/sysdep.obj): ($(BLD)/textprop.obj): ($(BLD)/widget.obj): ($(BLD)/xdisp.obj): Add dependency on w32gui.h. ($(BLD)/term.obj): Add dependency on dispextern.h.
author Andrew Innes <andrewi@gnu.org>
date Sat, 21 Oct 2000 13:24:14 +0000
parents afc8a292184c
children 0d8b17d428b5
line wrap: on
line source

;;; rfc2368.el --- support for rfc2368

;; Author: Sen Nagata <sen@eccosys.com>
;; Keywords: mail

;; Copyright (C) 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.

;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.

;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.

;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.

;;; Commentary:
;;
;; notes:
;;
;;   -repeat after me: "the colon is not part of the header name..."
;;   -if w3 becomes part of emacs, then it may make sense to have this
;;    file depend on w3 -- the maintainer of w3 says merging w/ Emacs
;;    is planned!
;;
;; historical note:
;;
;;   this is intended as a replacement for mailto.el
;;
;; acknowledgements:
;;
;;   the functions that deal w/ unhexifying in this file were basically
;; taken from w3 -- i hope to replace them w/ something else soon OR
;; perhaps if w3 becomes a part of emacs soon, use the functions from w3.

;;; History:
;;
;; 0.3:
;;
;;  added the constant rfc2368-version
;;  implemented first potential fix for a bug in rfc2368-mailto-regexp
;;  implemented first potential fix for a bug in rfc2368-parse-mailto
;;  (both bugs reported by Kenichi OKADA)
;;
;; 0.2:
;;
;;  started to use checkdoc
;;
;; 0.1:
;;
;;  initial implementation

;;; Code:

;; only an approximation?
;; see rfc 1738
(defconst rfc2368-mailto-regexp
  "^\\(mailto:\\)\\([^?]+\\)*\\(\\?\\(.*\\)\\)*"
  "Regular expression to match and aid in parsing a mailto url.")

;; describes 'mailto:'
(defconst rfc2368-mailto-scheme-index 1
  "Describes the 'mailto:' portion of the url.")
;; i'm going to call this part the 'prequery'
(defconst rfc2368-mailto-prequery-index 2
  "Describes the portion of the url between 'mailto:' and '?'.")
;; i'm going to call this part the 'query'
(defconst rfc2368-mailto-query-index 4
  "Describes the portion of the url after '?'.")

;; for dealing w/ unhexifying strings, my preferred approach is to use
;; a 'string-replace-match-using-function' which can perform a
;; string-replace-match and compute the replacement text based on a
;; passed function -- however, emacs doesn't seem to have such a
;; function yet :-(

;; for the moment a rip-off of url-unhex (w3/url.el)
(defun rfc2368-unhexify-char (char)
  "Unhexify CHAR -- e.g. %20 -> <SPC>."
  (if (> char ?9)
      (if (>= char ?a)
	  (+ 10 (- char ?a))
	(+ 10 (- char ?A)))
    (- char ?0)))

;; for the moment a rip-off of url-unhex-string (w3/url.el) (slightly modified)
(defun rfc2368-unhexify-string (string)
  "Unhexify STRING -- e.g. 'hello%20there' -> 'hello there'."
  (let ((case-fold-search t)
	(result ""))
    (while (string-match "%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]" string)
      (let* ((start (match-beginning 0))
	     (hex-code (+ (* 16
			     (rfc2368-unhexify-char (elt string (+ start 1))))
			  (rfc2368-unhexify-char (elt string (+ start 2))))))
	(setq result (concat
		      result (substring string 0 start)
		      (char-to-string hex-code))
	      string (substring string (match-end 0)))))
    ;; it seems clearer to do things this way than to just return:
    ;; (concat result string)
    (setq result (concat result string))
    result))

(defun rfc2368-parse-mailto-url (mailto-url)
  "Parse MAILTO-URL, and return an alist of header-name, header-value pairs.
MAILTO-URL should be a RFC 2368 (mailto) compliant url.  A cons cell w/ a
key of 'Body' is a special case and is considered a header for this purpose.
The returned alist is intended for use w/ the `compose-mail' interface.
Note: make sure MAILTO-URL has been 'unhtmlized' (e.g. &amp; -> &), before
calling this function."
  (let ((case-fold-search t)
	prequery query headers-alist)

    (if (string-match rfc2368-mailto-regexp mailto-url)
	(progn

	  (setq prequery
		(match-string rfc2368-mailto-prequery-index mailto-url))
	  
	  (setq query
		(match-string rfc2368-mailto-query-index mailto-url))

	  ;; build alist of header name-value pairs
	  (if (not (null query))
	      (setq headers-alist
		    (mapcar
		     (lambda (x)
		       (let* ((temp-list (split-string x "="))
			      (header-name (car temp-list))
			      (header-value (cadr temp-list)))
			 ;; return ("Header-Name" . "header-value")
			 (cons
			  (capitalize (rfc2368-unhexify-string header-name))
			  (rfc2368-unhexify-string header-value))))
		     (split-string query "&"))))

	  ;; deal w/ multiple 'To' recipients
	  (if prequery
	      (progn
		(if (assoc "To" headers-alist)
		    (let* ((our-cons-cell
			    (assoc "To" headers-alist))
			   (our-cdr
			    (cdr our-cons-cell)))
		      (setcdr our-cons-cell (concat our-cdr ", " prequery)))
		  (setq headers-alist
			(cons (cons "To" prequery) headers-alist)))))
	  
	  headers-alist)
      
      (error "Failed to match a mailto: url"))
    ))

(provide 'rfc2368)

;;; rfc2368.el ends here