You're Invited:Meet the Socket Team at RSAC and BSidesSF 2026, March 23–26.RSVP
Socket
Book a DemoSign in
Socket

maily

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
2
Versions
31
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

maily

Use standard React to create the HTML emails of your imagination without a headache

latest
npmnpm
Version
3.2.2
Version published
Maintainers
2
Created
Source

Maily

NPM version NPM license Dependency Status

In order to build great emails, every developer has the tendency of going crazy. To mitigate this, we've proposed Maily, a tool which can generate great emails using Express, MJML and React.

Maily runs as a service, to which you can POST data. It will return the appropriate HTML and text versions of your email respectively.

As an example, you can run npm run example (with Node 6), and request an HTML email or a text email

You'll easily build your emails using reusable components in React, and maily will transform it to the 1995 HTML required by clients!

Internally, we use a Node.js project which houses our templates. Maily is added as the render server. Any service wishing to create an email, send the appropriate JSON in a HTTP POST to the correct template. The resulting HTML and text are added to the email, and then send.

This allows you to run maily as a simple stateless service in e.g. Docker. It also allows you to handle email as you wish, for example by adding attachments before sending.

Install

git clone https://github.com/joostverdoorn/maily
cd maily
npm install

Start server

npm start

Usage

Open a browser and go to: http://localhost:3000/{:template}?{key=value}&{...}

Data can be passed by using GET with query parameters or POST with a request body.

Adding custom components

Components should render to MJML. Normal HTML can be used, but has to be escaped using mj-raw tags. We'd recommend to stay within the MJML spec though.

Reusable components

To make a component reusable, it should return an mj-section element. An example are the header.js files in the example directory.

const React = require('react');

const style = require('../style');

module.exports = React.createClass({
  propTypes: {
    name: React.PropTypes.string.isRequired
  },

  render() {
    return (
      <mj-section>
        <mj-text font-size={style.header.fontSize} color={style.colors.primary}>
          Hello, {this.props.name}
        </mj-text>
      </mj-section>
    );
  }
});

Template components

Template components are used in rendering the data. These are the type of component that you specify in the url endpoint. The create a new Template Components, make sure to render your component within mjml and mj-body tags. An example for these are the update.js files in the example dir.

const React = require('react');

const style = require('../style');

const Header = require('./header');
const Footer = require('./footer');

module.exports = React.createClass({
  propTypes: {
    name: React.PropTypes.string.isRequired,
    href: React.PropTypes.string.isRequired,
  },

  render() {
    return (
      <mjml>
        <mj-body>
          <Header name={this.props.name} />
  
          <mj-section>
            <mj-column>
  
              <mj-divider border-color={style.colors.tertiary}></mj-divider>
  
              <mj-text font-size="20px" color="#F45E43" font-family="helvetica">
                {this.props.body}
              </mj-text>
  
              <mj-button background-color={style.colors.secondary} href={this.props.href}>Go now!</mj-button>
  
            </mj-column>
          </mj-section>
  
          <Footer />
        </mj-body>
      </mjml>
    );
  }
});

FAQs

Package last updated on 28 Jan 2020

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts