File::MimeInfo::Cookbook - various code snippets |
File::MimeInfo::Cookbook - various code snippets
Some code snippets for non-basic uses of the the File::MimeInfo manpage module:
my $extension = '*.txt'; my $mimetype = mimetype( $extension );
use File::MimeInfo::Magic; use IO::Scalar; my $io_scalar = new IO::Scalar \$data; my $mimetype = mimetype( $io_scalar );
In fact most other IO::
will work as long as they support the seek()
and read()
methods. Of course if you want really obscure things to
happen you can always write your own IO object and feed it in there.
Be aware that when using a filehandle like this you need to set the :utf8
binmode yourself if apropriate.
IO::
object will not work. You will need to buffer enough of the data for a proper
mimetyping. For example you could mimetype data from STDIN like this:
use File::MimeInfo::Magic; use IO::Scalar;
my $data; read(STDIN, $data, $File::MimeInfo::Magic::max_buffer); my $io_scalar = new IO::Scalar \$data; my $mimetype = mimetype( $io_scalar );
Be aware that when using a filehandle like this you need to set the :utf8
binmode yourself if apropriate.
use File::MimeInfo::Magic qw#mimetype extensions#; use File::Copy; my $tmpfile = '/tmp/foo'; my $mimetype = mimetype($tmpfile); my $extension = extensions($mimetype); my $newfile = 'untitled1'; $newfile .= '.'.$extension if length $extension; move($tmpfile, $newfile);
@File::MimeInfo::DIRS = ('/home/me/share/mime'); eval 'use File::MimeInfo'; die if $@;
or:
use File::MimeInfo; @File::MimeInfo::DIRS = ('/home/me/share/mime'); File::MimeInfo->rehash();
This can also be used for switching between databases at run time while leaving other XDG configuration stuff alone.
Jaap Karssenberg (Pardus) <pardus@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2005,2008 Jaap G Karssenberg. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
File::MimeInfo::Cookbook - various code snippets |