Encyclopedia > MIME

  Article Content

MIME

MIME is an Internet Standard for Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions,

MIME was developed to provide a way of embedding binary content in E-mail. Traditional E-mail is only guaranteed to support the 7-bit ASCII character set, so a way was needed to encode 8-bit binary content such as programs, images, sounds, and movies in a form that could be carried in a 7-bit E-mail message.

MIME was designed so that different character encoding schemes could be developed, and also provided a simple sort of metadata in the form of MIME types[?], so that applications could work out what kind of content was contained in the E-mail message, and therefore know what kind of processing was needed to use the content.

A MIME multipart message contains a boundary in the Content-type: header; this boundary, which must not occur in any of the parts, is placed between the parts, and at the beginning and end of the body of the message, as follows:

Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="frontier"
MIME-version: 1.0

--frontier
Content-type: text/plain

This is the body of the message.
--frontier
Content-type: application/octet-stream
Content-transfer-encoding: base64

gajwO4+n2Fy4FV3V7zD9awd7uG8/TITP/vIocxXnnf/5mjgQjcipBUL1b3uyLwAVtBLOP4nV
LdIAhSzlZnyLAF8na0n7g6OSeej7aqIl3NIXCfxDsPsY6NQjSvV77j4hWEjlF/aglS6ghfju
FgRr+OX8QZMI1OmR4rUJUS7xgoknalqj3HJvaOpeb3CFlNI9VGZYz6H6zuQBOWZzNB8glwpC
--frontier--

Although HTTP does not use MIME encoding, it re-used the concept of MIME types to encode the types of binary content.

References:

External link:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Jordanes

... of Gothic kings in Italy. At the time of Justinian, he was a Christian and possibly bishop of Croton. In approximately 580, he wrote "De origine actibusque Getarum[?]" ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 28.9 ms