From 153ce2f3285a5dbaea66b3e97416e4476197489d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeremy Kemper Date: Tue, 29 Dec 2009 15:50:47 -0800 Subject: Clean up changelog a bit --- actionmailer/CHANGELOG | 34 ++++++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) (limited to 'actionmailer/CHANGELOG') diff --git a/actionmailer/CHANGELOG b/actionmailer/CHANGELOG index dc2d5f7314..6f4ba96844 100644 --- a/actionmailer/CHANGELOG +++ b/actionmailer/CHANGELOG @@ -1,35 +1,25 @@ -*Mail Integration +*Rails 3.0 (pending)* -* ActionMailer::Base :default_implicit_parts_order now is in the sequence of the order you want, no -reversing of ordering takes place. The default order now is text/plain, then text/enriched, then -text/html and then any other part that is not one of these three. +* ActionMailer::Base :default_implicit_parts_order now is in the sequence of the order you want, no reversing of ordering takes place. The default order now is text/plain, then text/enriched, then text/html and then any other part that is not one of these three. -* Mail does not have "quoted_body", "quoted_subject" etc. All of these are accessed via body.encoded, - subject.encoded etc +* Mail does not have "quoted_body", "quoted_subject" etc. All of these are accessed via body.encoded, subject.encoded etc -* Every part of a Mail object returns an object, never a string. So Mail.body returns a Mail::Body - class object, need to call #encoded or #decoded to get the string you want. - -* By default, a field will return the #decoded value when you send it :to_s and any object that - is a container (like header, body etc) will return #encoded value when you send it :to_s +* Every part of a Mail object returns an object, never a string. So Mail.body returns a Mail::Body class object, need to call #encoded or #decoded to get the string you want. + +* By default, a field will return the #decoded value when you send it :to_s and any object that is a container (like header, body etc) will return #encoded value when you send it :to_s * Mail::Message#set_content_type does not exist, it is simply Mail::Message#content_type -* Every mail message gets a unique message_id unless you specify one, had to change all the tests that - check for equality with expected.encoded == actual.encoded to first replace their message_ids with - control values +* Every mail message gets a unique message_id unless you specify one, had to change all the tests that check for equality with expected.encoded == actual.encoded to first replace their message_ids with control values * Mail now has a proper concept of parts, remove the ActionMailer::Part and ActionMailer::PartContainer classes -* Calling #encoded on any object returns it as a string ready to go into the output stream of an email, this - means it includes the \r\n at the end of the lines and the object is pre-wrapped with \r\n\t if it is a - header field. Also, the "encoded" value includes the field name if it is a header field. +* Calling #encoded on any object returns it as a string ready to go into the output stream of an email, this means it includes the \r\n at the end of the lines and the object is pre-wrapped with \r\n\t if it is a header field. Also, the "encoded" value includes the field name if it is a header field. + +* Attachments are only the actual attachment, with filename etc. A part contains an attachment. The part has the content_type etc. So attachments.last.content_type is invalid. But parts.last.content_type + +* There is no idea of a "sub_head" in Mail. A part is just a Message with some extra functionality, so it just has a "header" like a normal mail message -* Attachments are only the actual attachment, with filename etc. A part contains an attachment. The part - has the content_type etc. So attachments.last.content_type is invalid. But parts.last.content_type - -* There is no idea of a "sub_head" in Mail. A part is just a Message with some extra functionality, so it - just has a "header" like a normal mail message *2.3.2 [Final] (March 15, 2009)* -- cgit v1.2.3