Why? 🤷
While we would prefer for email to be phased out
and replaced by something better, the fact remains
that most people still use email as their primary
means of (digital) communication.

Given that email is not going away, we need to make
sending email to people as simple and reliable as possible.
What? 💭
Reliably Send beautiful email with dependable delivery.
When email that has to get through as quickly as possible
so everyone can get on with their lives.
Decisions We Made (to Get Started as Fast as Possible)
In crafting this module (for our own use) we have made a few
of technical decisions (for pragmatic reasons):
- use environment variables
for storing sensitive information (API Keys)
and projects-specific configuration (Template Directory)
- use Amazon Web Services Simple Email Service ("AWS SES")
for reliably sending email messages because it has good documentation,
excellent "deliverability" and no minimum spend (10 cents per 1000 emails sent)!
(there's also a generous "Free Tier" of 65k emails per month if you're new to AWS)
- use Handlebars for email template rendering. Handlebars is very
easy to use and allows us to send beautiful HTML emails without
the complexity or learning curve of many other view libraries.
Note: if you prefer to use a different Email Service provider or template/view
library for your project,
please let us know!
We are happy to support alternatives to make this project more
useful to other
people with specific needs.
How? ✅
Checklist (everything you need to get started in 5 minutes)
1. Install sendemail from NPM 📦
npm install sendemail --save
2. Set your Environment Variables 🔐
sendemail requires you set
five environment variables.
The first 4 relate to your AWS account
The TEMPLATE_DIRECTORY should contain your email
templates.
We recommend using env2
to load your Environment Variables from a file
so that you can easily keep track of which
variables you are using in each environment.
2.1 Verify Your Email Address on AWS SES
In order to send email from a specific email address,
you will need to verify that email address on AWS SES.
The process is quite simple,
but there are a few steps involved,
so we created a separate step-by-step guide:
How to setup AWS SES verified email?
2.2 Create an .env File
Once you have a verified email on AWS SES,
create a file in the root of your project called .env
and paste the following:
export AWS_REGION=eu-west-1
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=YOURKEY
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=YOURSUPERSECRET
export SENDER_EMAIL_ADDRESS=aws.verified.email@dwyl.com
export TEMPLATE_DIRECTORY=./examples/templates
Update the values to the real ones for your AWS account.
If you are new to environment variables, we have a
quick introduction: https://github.com/dwyl/learn-environment-variables
3. Create your Template(s) 📝
Create a pair of templates simple .html (pretty design) and .txt (plaintext) templates to get started.
Here's what our pair of templates look like side-by-side:

[ Click the image to expand/zoom ]
Question: Should we create plaintext templates (in addition to html?)?
Quick Answer: Yes.
For Expanded Answer, see: Plain Text Templates? section in Notes (below).
If you are stuck, have a look at /examples/templates/
4. Send an Email! ✉️
Create a file called email.js and paste the following:
var sendemail = require('sendemail')
var email = sendemail.email;
var person = {
name : "Jenny",
email: "your.name+test" + Math.random() + "@gmail.com",
subject:"Welcome to DWYL :)"
}
email('welcome', person, function(error, result){
console.log(' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -> email sent: ');
console.log(result);
console.log(' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -')
})
Result:

For full code of working example see: /examples/templates/send-welcome-email.js
Note: you still need to set your environment variables
for the email to be sent.
More Options?:
If you wish to send to multiple recipients of include CC or BCC recipients,
use the sendMany method. This allows you to provide an options object
with an array of toAddresses, ccAddresses, and bccAddresses and charset options.
e.g.
var sendemail = require('sendemail');
var options = {
templateName: 'hello',
context: {
tempalateVariableName: 'Variable Value',
name: 'Joe Bloggs'
},
subject: 'Welcome to Email',
senderEmailAddress: 'From Name <from@gmail.com>',
toAddresses: ['recipient1@gmail.com', 'recipient2@gmail.com'],
ccAddresses: ['ccRecipient1@gmail.com', 'ccRecipient2@gmail.com'],
bccAddresses: ['bccRecipient1@gmail.com', 'bccRecipient2@gmail.com'],
htmlCharset: 'utf16',
textCharset: 'utf16',
subjectCharset: 'utf8'
};
sendemail.sendMany(options, callback);
___
Notes?
Which Email Service Provider?
We are currently using AWS SES for dwyl.
If you want to use an alternative mail sender,
e.g: sendgrid
or mailgun
please tell us: https://github.com/dwyl/sendemail/issues
(we are always happy to help)
Moving out of AWS SES sandbox environment.
When you first sign up to AWS, you are provided with a sandbox account.
With this, you can send up to 200 emails a day, to email addresses that you
have registered on your sandbox environment. For some use cases this is fine,
but for those who want a higher daily sending quota, want to send emails
without the restriction of registering recipient emails upfront, amongst other
reasons
'moving out' of your sandbox might be beneficial.
For many services, this upgrade comes with a cost, but with AWS SES, this is
not necessarily the case. A quick and easy way to do so is to apply for an
increase in your SES Sending Limit; (1) click on the following link,
https://aws.amazon.com/ses/faqs/ (2) search for "apply" in section 4 and
(3) click 'apply'.
### Which View/Template Libaray?
For simplicity we are using
Handlebars,
handlebars is tried and tested and while it does not attempt
to do anything fancy ("VirtualDOM"), it does allow
you to do sophisticated templates with includes and iterators
and supports compilation so its fast
(fast enough ... how many millions of emails are you sending per day...?)
Yes... mustache is "faster"
than handlebars ... but in our experience having conditionals
(i.e. "logic") is very useful for reducing the number of required templates while not (significantly) increasing complexity.
we don't think if statements in views are a "crime" ... do you...?
If anyone feels strongly about switching to an alternative
template engine, please raise an issue:
https://github.com/dwyl/sendemail/issues
(please give clear reasons, i.e. not "react-ify-licious-heah because its so cool ... ")
Plain Text Templates?
In our experience, while most modern email clients
(Gmail, Apple/iOS Mail, Yahoo! Mail, Outlook)
have HTML email enabled by default,
often the people who prefer text-only
(e.g: people with Blackberry phones,
visual/physical impairment or company email
email systems - with aggressive filtering)
are "higher value" customers. Also,
possibly more importantly (depending on who is using your product/service) you can have technical privacy-concious people
that only read .txt email to avoid sending
and tracking data ... but, if you're building a tool for
non-technical people, focus on the fact that .txt email
is more accessible and prevents your messages getting
blocked by spam filters.
High volume of emails when running automated tests?
When testing functions which will subsequently call methods in third party libraries,
your tests no longer need to run through those methods,
you can instead assume that the third party method will give back what they say they will give back
(since these tests should already exist in the library you are using).
Once you are sure there are sufficient tests in place for the method you will stub, you may proceed with a test double.
For this library there are significant benefits for using a test double for the email method (see #49).
The following is a quick example of how to implement a test stub:
If you have a helper function notifyUser which will subsequently call require('sendemail').email, this can be stubbed with:
var notifyUser = require('./notifyUser.js');
test('"notifyUser" should return the object { message: "email sent" }', function (t) {
notifyUser('Bob', function (err, res) {
t.deepEqual(res, { message: 'email sent' });
t.end();
});
});
To be something like this:
var notifyUser = require('./notifyUser.js');
var sinon = require('sinon');
var sendemail = require('sendemail');
test('"notifyUser" should return the object { message: "email sent", error: null }', function (t) {
var email = sinon.stub(sendemail, 'email', function (name, person, cb) {
cb(null, { message: 'email sent', anyotherkeywecareabout: 'value' });
});
notifyUser('Bob', function (err, res) {
email.restore();
t.ok(email.calledWith('Bob'));
t.deepEqual(res, { message: 'email sent' });
t.end();
});
});
Check out the article in background reading for best practices when implementing test doubles with sinon
Useful Links:
### Background Reading
Technical/Implementation Detail
Stats/Trends
Want Examples?
There are many situations where you want to send people email.
Welcome Email!
A simple "hello & welcome to our community" email
you send to people when they register to learn more about
your product/service.
see: /examples/templates/send-welcome-email.js
Verification Email Address
As part of registering new people for your app you
will need to verify their email addresses to ensure that people
are not signing up with fake emails (or worse using someone else's email!)
Reset Password
People forget passwords, we need to help them
set a new password as quickly & securely as possible.
Reminder Email?
Remind people they signed up but have not used the product/service?
Notification Email?
Sam liked your post/photo/update ...
social validation that your life has meaning! 😉