<term>-p header1[,header2,header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]</term>
<listitem>
<para>
- Add the parameters(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
- the parameters will be decoded only for the given header(s).
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
+ the parameter(s) will be decoded only for the given header(s).
Initially the list contains header "Content-Type", parameter "name";
and header "Content-Disposition", parameter "filename".
</para>
<term>-p *[,-header1,-header2,-header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]</term>
<listitem>
<para>
- Add the parameters(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
- the parameters will be decoded for all headers except the given
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to decode;
+ the parameter(s) will be decoded for all headers except the given
ones.
</para>
</listitem>
<term>-R header1[,header2,header3,...]:param1[,param2,param3,...]</term>
<listitem>
<para>
- Add the parameters(s) to a list of headers parameters to remove;
- the parameters will be removed only for the given header(s).
+ Add the parameter(s) to a list of headers parameters to remove;
+ the parameter(s) will be removed only for the given header(s).
Initially the list is empty.
</para>
</listitem>
earlier than -B */*.
</para>
+<para>
+ Option -i can also ignore a multipart subpart of a MIME message. In that case
+ the entire subtree of that multipart is removed and replaced with ignore
+ warning.
+</para>
+
<para>
Initially all 5 lists are empty, so without any additional parameters
the program always uses the default decoding (as -t */*).