Encode MIMEText as quoted printables
Okay, I got one solution which is very hacky, but at least it leads into some direction: MIMEText
assumes base64 and I don't know how to change this. For this reason I use MIMENonMultipart
:
import email.mime, email.mime.nonmultipart, email.charset
m=email.mime.nonmultipart.MIMENonMultipart('text', 'plain', charset='utf-8')
#Construct a new charset which uses Quoted Printables (base64 is default)
cs=email.charset.Charset('utf-8')
cs.body_encoding = email.charset.QP
#Now set the content using the new charset
m.set_payload(u'This is the text containing ünicöde', charset=cs)
Now the message seems to be encoded correctly:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
This is the text containing =C3=BCnic=C3=B6de
One can even construct a new class which hides the complexity:
class MIMEUTF8QPText(email.mime.nonmultipart.MIMENonMultipart):
def __init__(self, payload):
email.mime.nonmultipart.MIMENonMultipart.__init__(self, 'text', 'plain',
charset='utf-8')
utf8qp=email.charset.Charset('utf-8')
utf8qp.body_encoding=email.charset.QP
self.set_payload(payload, charset=utf8qp)
And use it like this:
m = MIMEUTF8QPText(u'This is the text containing ünicöde')
m.as_string()
In Python 3 you do not need your hack:
import email
# Construct a new charset which uses Quoted Printables (base64 is default)
cs = email.charset.Charset('utf-8')
cs.body_encoding = email.charset.QP
m = email.mime.text.MIMEText(u'This is the text containing ünicöde', 'plain', _charset=cs)
print(m.as_string())
Adapted from issue 1525919 and tested on python 2.7:
from email.Message import Message
from email.Charset import Charset, QP
text = "\xc3\xa1 = \xc3\xa9"
msg = Message()
charset = Charset('utf-8')
charset.header_encoding = QP
charset.body_encoding = QP
msg.set_charset(charset)
msg.set_payload(msg._charset.body_encode(text))
print msg.as_string()
will give you:
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
=C3=A1 =3D =C3=A9
Also see this response from a Python committer.