(PHP 5)
iconv_mime_encode — Composes a MIME header field
Composes and returns a string that represents a valid MIME header field, which looks like the following:
Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Pr=FCfung_f=FCr?= Entwerfen von einer MIME kopfzeile
The field name.
The field value.
You can control the behaviour of iconv_mime_encode() by specifying an associative array that contains configuration items to the optional third parameter preferences. The items supported by iconv_mime_encode() are listed below. Note that item names are treated case-sensitive.
Item | Type | Description | Default value | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
scheme | string | Specifies the method to encode a field value by. The value of this item may be either "B" or "Q", where "B" stands for base64 encoding scheme and "Q" stands for quoted-printable encoding scheme. | B | B |
input-charset | string | Specifies the character set in which the first parameter field_name and the second parameter field_value are presented. If not given, iconv_mime_encode() assumes those parameters are presented to it in the iconv.internal_encoding ini setting. | iconv.internal_encoding | ISO-8859-1 |
output-charset | string | Specifies the character set to use to compose the MIME header. | iconv.internal_encoding | UTF-8 |
line-length | integer | Specifies the maximum length of the header lines. The resulting header is "folded" to a set of multiple lines in case the resulting header field would be longer than the value of this parameter, according to » RFC2822 - Internet Message Format. If not given, the length will be limited to 76 characters. | 76 | 996 |
line-break-chars | string | Specifies the sequence of characters to append to each line as an end-of-line sign when "folding" is performed on a long header field. If not given, this defaults to "\r\n" (CR LF). Note that this parameter is always treated as an ASCII string regardless of the value of input-charset. | \r\n | \n |
Returns an encoded MIME field on success, or FALSE if an error occurs during the encoding.
Beispiel #1 iconv_mime_encode() example
<?php
$preferences = array(
"input-charset" => "ISO-8859-1",
"output-charset" => "UTF-8",
"line-length" => 76,
"line-break-chars" => "\n"
);
$preferences["scheme"] = "Q";
// This yields "Subject: =?UTF-8?Q?Pr=C3=BCfung=20Pr=C3=BCfung?="
echo iconv_mime_encode("Subject", "Prüfung Prüfung", $preferences);
$preferences["scheme"] = "B";
// This yields "Subject: =?UTF-8?B?UHLDvGZ1bmcgUHLDvGZ1bmc=?="
echo iconv_mime_encode("Subject", "Prüfung Prüfung", $preferences);
?>
Looks like this function suffers from the same bug as mb_encode_mime() with long strings of non us-ascii characters. The function then returns false. This applies for utf-8 to utf-8 "conversion".
<?php
$subject = 'Вы находитесь здесь: Главная > продукт';
$prefs = array(
'scheme' => 'Q',
'input-charset' => 'UTF-8',
'output-charset' => 'UTF-8',
'line-length' => 76,
'line-break-chars' => "\r\n",
);
echo 'Original: ' . $subject . PHP_EOL;
$enc = iconv_mime_encode( 'Subject', $subject, $prefs );
var_dump( $enc ); // will show bool(false)
?>
As a workaround, you could explode() the value on spaces and encode each word separately. Then remove the "Subject: " in front of the resulting strings and join() them with "\r\n " (don't forget the SPACE after the \n) as separator.