Simo Sorce sent me an interesting case where the MIME type of the
message itself was image/gif, but the image was not being shown.
If the EMailPart representing the message body is marked as an
attachment, wrap it as such so it gets added to the attachment
bar but also set the "force_inline" flag since it doesn't make
sense to collapse the message body if we can render it. */
This splits the print dialog's "Headers" tab into a separate widget.
EMailPrintConfigHeaders takes an EMailPartHeaders and displays its print
model, which is a representation of all message headers (except subject)
with an on/off flag for each. The headers can be toggled and reordered,
and the changes are written back to the print model.
During printing, EMailFormatterPrintHeaders uses the same print model
to determine which headers to show and in what order (except subject).
This approach is much saner than the old method, which was trying to
manipulate WebKitWebView DOM directly to toggle and reorder headers.
This approach also happens to work, whereas the old method did not.
Returns a GtkTreeModel of header names and values and visibility flags,
built from the CamelMimeMessage. The tree model rows can be reordered
and toggled prior to printing.
Also add e_mail_part_headers_is_default() as a handy helper.
This will replace the headers API in EMailFormatter. Need a more
permanent place for headers since EMailFormatter is too disposable.
Also add an ESettingsMailPartHeaders class, which binds the new property
to the "show-headers" setting with a suitable mapping function to filter
out disabled header names.
Split the _camel_header_raw struct parameter into separate "header_name"
and "header_value" string parameters, which is all the function actually
needs to work.
This is a weak reference to the EMailPartList to which the EMailPart
has been added. The property is set by e_mail_part_list_add_part().
New functions:
e_mail_part_ref_part_list()
e_mail_part_set_part_list()
The HTML for attachments always has the following form:
<div class="attachment-wrapper" id="something" style="display: block;">
<actual attachment element>
</div>
The <div> element controls attachment visibility through its "display"
style attribute, which is either "block" or "none".
Problem is the <actual attachment element> was getting the same ID as
its parent <div> element. So when either element was requested by ID,
in certain cases the wrong element was returned and caused misbehavior
and console warnings.
Solve this by adding a "wrapper" suffix to the <div> element ID. So in
the example above, id="something" gets the <actual attachment element>,
whereas id="something.wrapper" gets the <div> element.
We used to do this before WebKit and it looked better.
Also fix up the header section for right-to-left locales:
put the collapse button on the right, and images on the left.