Transactional and marketing email templates and builder for RevolutionUC
Table of Contents
- Usage
- Developing
- Creating and Modifying Email Templates / Styles
- Using an Email Template in Mailchimp
- Using Mailchimp Variables (aka Merge Tags)
- Known Issues
- The terrible truth about html emails
- Tests
Install the module as a dependency with npm install --save github:revolutionuc/revolutionuc-emails
. Next, use the api to build emails:
The API allows the creation of html and plain text based transactional emails (ex: Mailgun).
const { build } = require('revolutionuc-emails')
const template = 'welcome' // choose from templates in `./templates/`
const templateData = {
subject: 'Email subject', // required
shortDescription: 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit.' // required (this is shown next to the subject in most email clients)
}
const html = await build(template, templateData) // returns minified html
or to send the email with Mailgun:
const { build, send } = require('revolutionuc-emails')
// ...
const html = await build(template, templateData)
await send(mailgunApiKey, mailgunDomain, 'RevolutionUC <info@revolutionuc.com>', 'you@example.com', templateData.subject, html)
// or use a promise:
// send(mailgunApiKey, mailgunDomain, 'RevolutionUC <info@revolutionuc.com>', 'you@example.com', templateData.subject, html)
// .then(() => console.log('Done'))
// .catch(console.error)
Another example with a verifyEmail
template:
TODO
The email builder allows templates to be built ready with variable placeholders for marketing purposes (ex: MailChimp). To build an email ready for MailChimp, simply pass null
for template data:
const { build } = require('revolutionuc-emails')
const content = await build('welcome', null)
Or use npm run develop-build
(or npm run build
) to build to ./dist/
.
All templates take a subject
and shortDescription
template variables by default. In addition, each template has its own variables:
firstName
(the user's first name)yesConfirmationUrl
(confirmation url for a "yes" response)noConfirmationUrl
(confirmation url for a "no" response)offWaitlist
(boolean - whether to notify the user that they have been moved off the waitlist)
firstName
(the user's first name)
firstName
(the user's first name)
firstName
(the user's first name)
firstName
(the user's first name)
- body (text)
firstName
(the user's first name)
firstName
(the user's first name)verificationUrl
(a url)waitlist
(boolean: whether or not to display the waitlist text to the user)
No additional variables
Get started hacking on revolutionuc-emails by:
git clone git@github.com:RevolutionUC/revolutionuc-emails.git
cd revolutionuc-emails
cp .env.example .env # replace with your api key and domain (mailgun.com to signup free - see below for other setup instructions)
npm install
npm run build # or `npm run develop-build` to watch
A how-to guide for creating and modifying email templates: first, setup your environment:
Install Node.js (brew install node
on macOS) and git (brew install git
on macOS). You'll need Node.js v8.0.0 or newer.
Clone and install dependencies (note: some dependencies may warn that they are deprecated, this is ok), then open in your favorite text editor:
$ git clone git@github.com:RevolutionUC/revolutionuc-emails.git
$ cd revolutionuc-emails
$ npm install
$ code .
Run develop-build for changes, then open your browser to http://localhost:3000 to preview templates:
$ npm run develop-build
# visit http://localhost:3000
With develop-build running, edit template files in templates/
or edit styling in templates/master.njk
, then check out the changes in your browser (auto-refreshed by BrowserSync!). To create a new template, just copy and existing template.
Nunjucks is the templating engine used for all templates. Nunjucks is an extension of HTML. The HTML layout is written in heml. heml converts high-level tags like <row></row>
and <column></column>
to old-school HTML tables so all email clients are able to render. See the heml docs to learn about working with layouts, buttons, etc.
Start by creating a new template in templates/
. For example, a new template could be called awesome.njk
which extends master.njk
. An example template looks like:
{% extends './templates/master.njk' %}
{% block body %}
<h1>My awesome template!</h1>
<button href="http://revolutionuc.com/register/" target="_blank">Call to Action</button>
{% endblock %}
Note: the builder is inefficient (it rebuilds all templates even if just one template is modified), so expect builds to take 1-2 seconds.
Once your satisfied with the template changes. Stop develop-build, then run:
$ npm run build
All templates are now in their final HTML form available in dist/
. There, you can copy and paste the HTML into Mailchimp, the UC listserv, etc. See below for using Mailchimp variables for a personal touch in your emails.
If you're creating a new campaign, use these steps to paste the HTML from npm run build
.
If you're creating a new template, use these steps to paste the HTML from npm run build
.
Mailchimp documentation: https://mailchimp.com/help/all-the-merge-tags-cheat-sheet/
Use these merge tags, like *|FNAME|*
and *|LNAME|*
, when writing your templates for a personal touch when sending with Mailchimp.
- When running
develop-build
and editing themaster.njk
template, the browser doesn't always reload with changes reflected. In this scenario, restartdevelop-build
.
The sad truth about creating or coding HTML emails is that tables are the only things that are universally supported when it comes to email design. If you came from the world of building websites, this may seem like a stepping into Doc Brown's Delorean, charging up the Flux-capitor, and going back to the 1996. Suddenly your CSS is written with inline style tags, useful CSS properties don't work and you're burried in a sea of table tags. General rule of thumb: your email is not going to look identical in every client. And that’s OK.
-- Zurb docs
This project uses heml library which allows us to write html5-like syntax and compile to old-school html table based formats, so writing our email templates in a table format is not necessary!
Get an api key from Mailgun. Copy .env.example
to .env
with cp .env.example .env
, place the Mailgun api key and domain in .env
, specify an email address, template, and template data to send to in bin/testEmail.js
, then run node bin/testEmail.js
to send a test email.
Run tests with npm test
. Check code coverage with npm run coverage
.