/usr/share/perl5/MojoX/MIME/Types.pod is in libmime-types-perl 2.09-3.
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=head1 NAME
MojoX::MIME::Types - MIME Types for Mojolicious
=head1 INHERITANCE
MojoX::MIME::Types
is a Mojo::Base
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use MojoX::MIME::Types;
# set in Mojolicious as default
$app->types(MojoX::MIME::Types->new);
app->types(MojoX::MIME::Types->new); # ::Lite
# basic interface translated into pure MIME::Types
$types->type(foo => 'text/foo');
say $types->type('foo');
=head1 DESCRIPTION
[Added to MIME::Types 2.07]
This module is a drop-in replacement for Mojolicious::Types, but
with a more correct handling plus a complete list of types... a huge
list of types.
Some methods ignore information they receive: those parameters are
accepted for compatibility with the Mojolicious::Types interface,
but should not contain useful information.
Read the L</DETAILS> below, about how to connect this module into
Mojolicious and the differences you get.
=head1 METHODS
=head2 Constructors
=over 4
=item MojoX::MIME::Types-E<gt>B<new>(%options)
Create the 'type' handler for Mojolicious. When you do not specify your
own MIME::Type object ($mime_type), it will be instantanted for you.
You create one yourself when you would like to pass some parameter to
the object constructor.
-Option --Default
mime_types <created internally>
types undef
=over 2
=item mime_types => MIME::Types-object
Pass your own prepared L<MIME::Types|MIME::Types> object, when you need some
instantiation parameters different from the defaults.
=item types => HASH
Ignored.
=back
example:
$app->types(MojoX::MIME::Types->new);
# when you need to pass options to MIME::Types->new
my $mt = MIME::Types->new(%opts);
my $types = MojoX::MIME::Types->new(mime_types => $mt);
$app->types($types);
=back
=head2 Attributes
=over 4
=item $obj-E<gt>B<mimeTypes>()
Returns the internal mime types object.
=item $obj-E<gt>B<types>( [\%table] )
In Mojolicious::Types, this attribute exposes the internal
administration of types, offering to change it with using a clean
abstract interface. That interface mistake bites now we have more
complex internals.
B<Avoid this method!> The returned HASH is expensive to construct,
changes passed via C<%table> are ignored: L<MIME::Types|MIME::Types> is very complete!
=back
=head2 Actions
=over 4
=item $obj-E<gt>B<detect>( $accept, [$prio] )
Returns a list of filename extensions. The $accept header in HTTP can
contain multiple types, with a priority indication ('q' attributes).
The returned list contains a list with extensions, the extensions related
to the highest priority type first. The C<$prio>-flag is ignored.
See L<MIME::Types::httpAccept()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support">.
This detect() function is not the correct approach for the Accept header:
the "Accept" may contain wildcards ('*') in types for globbing, which
does not produce extensions. Better use L<MIME::Types::httpAcceptBest()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support">
or L<MIME::Types::httpAcceptSelect()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support">.
example:
my $exts = $types->detect('application/json;q=9');
my $exts = $types->detect('text/html, application/json;q=9');
=item $obj-E<gt>B<type>( $ext, [$type|\@types] )
Returns the first type name for an extension $ext, unless you specify
type names.
When a single $type or an ARRAY of @types are specified, the C<$self>
object is returned. Nothing is done with the provided info.
=back
=head1 DETAILS
=head2 Why?
The Mojolicious::Types module has only very little knowledge about
what is really needed to treat types correctly, and only contains a tiny
list of extensions. L<MIME::Types|MIME::Types> tries to follow the standards
very closely and contains all types found in various lists on internet.
=head2 How to use with Mojolicious
Start your Mojo application like this:
package MyApp;
use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';
sub startup {
my $self = shift;
...
$self->types(MojoX::MIME::Types->new);
}
If you have special options for L<MIME::Types::new()|MIME::Types/"Constructors">, then create
your own MIME::Types object first:
my $mt = MIME::Types->new(%opts);
my $types = MojoX::MIME::Types->new(mime_types => $mt);
$self->types($types);
In any case, you can reach the smart L<MIME::Types|MIME::Types> object later as
my $mt = $app->types->mimeTypes;
my $mime = $mt->mimeTypeOf($filename);
=head2 How to use with Mojolicious::Lite
The use in Mojolicious::Lite applications is only slightly different
from above:
app->types(MojoX::MIME::Types->new);
my $types = app->types;
=head2 Differences with Mojolicious::Types
There are a few major difference with Mojolicious::Types:
=over 4
=item *
the tables maintained by L<MIME::Types|MIME::Types> are complete. So: there shouldn't
be a need to add your own types, not via L<types()|MojoX::MIME::Types/"Attributes">, not via L<type()|MojoX::MIME::Types/"Actions">.
All attempts to add types are ignored; better remove them from your code.
=item *
This plugin understands the experimental flag 'x-' in types and handles
casing issues.
=item *
Updates to the internal hash via types() are simply ignored, because it
is expensive to implement (and won't add something new).
=item *
The L<detect()|MojoX::MIME::Types/"Actions"> is implemented in a compatible way, but does not understand
wildcards ('*'). You should use L<MIME::Types::httpAcceptBest()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support"> or
L<MIME::Types::httpAcceptSelect()|MIME::Types/"HTTP support"> to replace this broken function.
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
This module is part of MIME-Types distribution version 2.09,
built on September 14, 2014. Website: F<http://perl.overmeer.net/mimetypes/>
=head1 LICENSE
Copyrights 1999,2001-2014 by [Mark Overmeer]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
See F<http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
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