The 5 list options (-Bbeit) require more explanation. They allow a user to
control body decoding with great flexibility. Think about said mail archive;
for example, its maintainer wants to put there only texts, convert
- Postscript/PDF to text, pass HTML and images as is, and ignore everything
- else. Easy:
+ PDF/Postscript to text, pass HTML and images as is (decoding base64 to html
+ but left images in base64), and ignore everything else. Easy:
</para>
<para>
<code language="sh">
- mimedecode.py -t application/postscript -t application/pdf -b text/html
- -b 'image/*' -i '*/*'
+ mimedecode.py -t application/pdf -t application/postscript -b text/html
+ -B 'image/*' -i '*/*'
</code>
</para>
<para>
When the program decodes a message (non-MIME or a non-multipart subpart of a
MIME message), it consults Content-Type header. The content type is searched
- in all 4 lists, in order "text-binary-ignore-error". If found, appropriate
+ in all 5 lists, in order "text-binary-ignore-error". If found, appropriate
action performed. If not found, the program search the same lists for
"type/*" mask (the type of "text/html" is just "text"). If found,
appropriate action performed. If not found, the program search the same
</para>
<para>
- Initially all 4 lists are empty, so without any additional parameters
+ Initially all 5 lists are empty, so without any additional parameters
the program always uses the default decoding.
</para>