Fixes to syborg-graphicswrapper.vcproj
These changes allow syborg-graphicswrapper to link against the hostthreadadapter and khronosapiwrapper libraries built by the graphics.simulator component.
The .vcproj file uses relative paths, which requires that the following three packages are laid out as follows:
os/
graphics
adapt/
graphics.simulator
qemu
:mod:`email`: Creating email and MIME objects from scratch
----------------------------------------------------------
.. module:: email.mime
:synopsis: Build MIME messages.
Ordinarily, you get a message object structure by passing a file or some text to
a parser, which parses the text and returns the root message object. However
you can also build a complete message structure from scratch, or even individual
:class:`Message` objects by hand. In fact, you can also take an existing
structure and add new :class:`Message` objects, move them around, etc. This
makes a very convenient interface for slicing-and-dicing MIME messages.
You can create a new object structure by creating :class:`Message` instances,
adding attachments and all the appropriate headers manually. For MIME messages
though, the :mod:`email` package provides some convenient subclasses to make
things easier.
Here are the classes:
.. class:: MIMEBase(_maintype, _subtype, **_params)
Module: :mod:`email.mime.base`
This is the base class for all the MIME-specific subclasses of :class:`Message`.
Ordinarily you won't create instances specifically of :class:`MIMEBase`,
although you could. :class:`MIMEBase` is provided primarily as a convenient
base class for more specific MIME-aware subclasses.
*_maintype* is the :mailheader:`Content-Type` major type (e.g. :mimetype:`text`
or :mimetype:`image`), and *_subtype* is the :mailheader:`Content-Type` minor
type (e.g. :mimetype:`plain` or :mimetype:`gif`). *_params* is a parameter
key/value dictionary and is passed directly to :meth:`Message.add_header`.
The :class:`MIMEBase` class always adds a :mailheader:`Content-Type` header
(based on *_maintype*, *_subtype*, and *_params*), and a
:mailheader:`MIME-Version` header (always set to ``1.0``).
.. class:: MIMENonMultipart()
Module: :mod:`email.mime.nonmultipart`
A subclass of :class:`MIMEBase`, this is an intermediate base class for MIME
messages that are not :mimetype:`multipart`. The primary purpose of this class
is to prevent the use of the :meth:`attach` method, which only makes sense for
:mimetype:`multipart` messages. If :meth:`attach` is called, a
:exc:`MultipartConversionError` exception is raised.
.. versionadded:: 2.2.2
.. class:: MIMEMultipart([subtype[, boundary[, _subparts[, _params]]]])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.multipart`
A subclass of :class:`MIMEBase`, this is an intermediate base class for MIME
messages that are :mimetype:`multipart`. Optional *_subtype* defaults to
:mimetype:`mixed`, but can be used to specify the subtype of the message. A
:mailheader:`Content-Type` header of :mimetype:`multipart/`*_subtype* will be
added to the message object. A :mailheader:`MIME-Version` header will also be
added.
Optional *boundary* is the multipart boundary string. When ``None`` (the
default), the boundary is calculated when needed.
*_subparts* is a sequence of initial subparts for the payload. It must be
possible to convert this sequence to a list. You can always attach new subparts
to the message by using the :meth:`Message.attach` method.
Additional parameters for the :mailheader:`Content-Type` header are taken from
the keyword arguments, or passed into the *_params* argument, which is a keyword
dictionary.
.. versionadded:: 2.2.2
.. class:: MIMEApplication(_data[, _subtype[, _encoder[, **_params]]])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.application`
A subclass of :class:`MIMENonMultipart`, the :class:`MIMEApplication` class is
used to represent MIME message objects of major type :mimetype:`application`.
*_data* is a string containing the raw byte data. Optional *_subtype* specifies
the MIME subtype and defaults to :mimetype:`octet-stream`.
Optional *_encoder* is a callable (i.e. function) which will perform the actual
encoding of the data for transport. This callable takes one argument, which is
the :class:`MIMEApplication` instance. It should use :meth:`get_payload` and
:meth:`set_payload` to change the payload to encoded form. It should also add
any :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` or other headers to the message
object as necessary. The default encoding is base64. See the
:mod:`email.encoders` module for a list of the built-in encoders.
*_params* are passed straight through to the base class constructor.
.. versionadded:: 2.5
.. class:: MIMEAudio(_audiodata[, _subtype[, _encoder[, **_params]]])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.audio`
A subclass of :class:`MIMENonMultipart`, the :class:`MIMEAudio` class is used to
create MIME message objects of major type :mimetype:`audio`. *_audiodata* is a
string containing the raw audio data. If this data can be decoded by the
standard Python module :mod:`sndhdr`, then the subtype will be automatically
included in the :mailheader:`Content-Type` header. Otherwise you can explicitly
specify the audio subtype via the *_subtype* parameter. If the minor type could
not be guessed and *_subtype* was not given, then :exc:`TypeError` is raised.
Optional *_encoder* is a callable (i.e. function) which will perform the actual
encoding of the audio data for transport. This callable takes one argument,
which is the :class:`MIMEAudio` instance. It should use :meth:`get_payload` and
:meth:`set_payload` to change the payload to encoded form. It should also add
any :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` or other headers to the message
object as necessary. The default encoding is base64. See the
:mod:`email.encoders` module for a list of the built-in encoders.
*_params* are passed straight through to the base class constructor.
.. class:: MIMEImage(_imagedata[, _subtype[, _encoder[, **_params]]])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.image`
A subclass of :class:`MIMENonMultipart`, the :class:`MIMEImage` class is used to
create MIME message objects of major type :mimetype:`image`. *_imagedata* is a
string containing the raw image data. If this data can be decoded by the
standard Python module :mod:`imghdr`, then the subtype will be automatically
included in the :mailheader:`Content-Type` header. Otherwise you can explicitly
specify the image subtype via the *_subtype* parameter. If the minor type could
not be guessed and *_subtype* was not given, then :exc:`TypeError` is raised.
Optional *_encoder* is a callable (i.e. function) which will perform the actual
encoding of the image data for transport. This callable takes one argument,
which is the :class:`MIMEImage` instance. It should use :meth:`get_payload` and
:meth:`set_payload` to change the payload to encoded form. It should also add
any :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` or other headers to the message
object as necessary. The default encoding is base64. See the
:mod:`email.encoders` module for a list of the built-in encoders.
*_params* are passed straight through to the :class:`MIMEBase` constructor.
.. class:: MIMEMessage(_msg[, _subtype])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.message`
A subclass of :class:`MIMENonMultipart`, the :class:`MIMEMessage` class is used
to create MIME objects of main type :mimetype:`message`. *_msg* is used as the
payload, and must be an instance of class :class:`Message` (or a subclass
thereof), otherwise a :exc:`TypeError` is raised.
Optional *_subtype* sets the subtype of the message; it defaults to
:mimetype:`rfc822`.
.. class:: MIMEText(_text[, _subtype[, _charset]])
Module: :mod:`email.mime.text`
A subclass of :class:`MIMENonMultipart`, the :class:`MIMEText` class is used to
create MIME objects of major type :mimetype:`text`. *_text* is the string for
the payload. *_subtype* is the minor type and defaults to :mimetype:`plain`.
*_charset* is the character set of the text and is passed as a parameter to the
:class:`MIMENonMultipart` constructor; it defaults to ``us-ascii``. No guessing
or encoding is performed on the text data.
.. versionchanged:: 2.4
The previously deprecated *_encoding* argument has been removed. Encoding
happens implicitly based on the *_charset* argument.