/* -*- Mode: C; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- * * The contents of this file are subject to the Netscape Public License * Version 1.0 (the "NPL"); you may not use this file except in * compliance with the NPL. You may obtain a copy of the NPL at * http://www.mozilla.org/NPL/ * * Software distributed under the NPL is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, * WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the NPL * for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the * NPL. * * The Initial Developer of this code under the NPL is Netscape * Communications Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are * Copyright (C) 1998 Netscape Communications Corporation. All Rights * Reserved. */ /* mimetext.h --- definition of the MimeInlineText class (see mimei.h) Created: Jamie Zawinski , 15-May-96. */ #ifndef _MIMETEXT_H_ #define _MIMETEXT_H_ #include "mimeleaf.h" /* The MimeInlineText class is the superclass of all handlers for the MIME text/ content types (which convert various text formats to HTML, in one form or another.) It provides two services: = if ROT13 decoding is desired, the text will be rotated before the `parse_line' method it called; = text will be converted from the message's charset to the "target" charset before the `parse_line' method is called. The contract with charset-conversion is that the converted data will be such that one may interpret any octets (8-bit bytes) in the data which are in the range of the ASCII characters (0-127) as ASCII characters. It is explicitly legal, for example, to scan through the string for "<" and replace it with "<", and to search for things that look like URLs and to wrap them with interesting HTML tags. The charset to which we convert will probably be UTF-8 (an encoding of the Unicode character set, with the feature that all octets with the high bit off have the same interpretations as ASCII.) #### NOTE: if it turns out that we use JIS (ISO-2022-JP) as the target encoding, then this is not quite true; it is safe to search for the low ASCII values (under hex 0x40, octal 0100, which is '@') but it is NOT safe to search for values higher than that -- they may be being used as the subsequent bytes in a multi-byte escape sequence. It's a nice coincidence that HTML's critical characters ("<", ">", and "&") have values under 0x40... */ typedef struct MimeInlineTextClass MimeInlineTextClass; typedef struct MimeInlineText MimeInlineText; struct MimeInlineTextClass { MimeLeafClass leaf; int (*rot13_line) (MimeObject *obj, char *line, int32 length); int (*convert_line_charset) (MimeObject *obj, char *line, int32 length); }; extern MimeInlineTextClass mimeInlineTextClass; struct MimeInlineText { MimeLeaf leaf; /* superclass variables */ char *charset; /* The charset from the content-type of this object, or the caller-specified overrides or defaults. */ char *cbuffer; /* Buffer used for charset conversion. */ int32 cbuffer_size; }; #endif /* _MIMETEXT_H_ */