Easily create beautiful emails using MJML right from Elixir!
Available in Hex, the package can be installed by adding mjml_eex
to your list of
dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:mjml_eex, "~> 0.9.0"}
]
end
Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/mjml_eex.
If you rely on this library to generate awesome looking emails for your application, it would much appreciated if you can give back to the project in order to help ensure its continued development.
Checkout my GitHub Sponsorship page if you want to help out!
Add {:mjml_eex, "~> 0.7.0"}
to your mix.exs
file and run mix deps.get
. After you have that in place, you
can go ahead and create a template module like so:
defmodule BasicTemplate do
use MjmlEEx, mjml_template: "basic_template.mjml.eex"
end
And the accompanying MJML EEx template basic_template.mjml.eex
(note that the path is relative to the calling
module path):
<mjml>
<mj-body>
<mj-section>
<mj-column>
<mj-divider border-color="#F45E43"></mj-divider>
<mj-text font-size="20px" color="#F45E43">Hello <%= @first_name %> <%= @last_name %>!</mj-text>
</mj-column>
</mj-section>
</mj-body>
</mjml>
With those two in place, you can now run BasicTemplate.render(first_name: "Alex", last_name: "Koutmos")
and you
will get back an HTML document that can be emailed to users.
You can also call functions from your template module if they exist in your MJML EEx template using the following module declaration:
defmodule FunctionTemplate do
use MjmlEEx, mjml_template: "function_template.mjml.eex"
defp generate_full_name(first_name, last_name) do
"#{first_name} #{last_name}"
end
end
In conjunction with the following template:
<mjml>
<mj-body>
<mj-section>
<mj-column>
<mj-divider border-color="#F45E43"></mj-divider>
<mj-text font-size="20px" color="#F45E43">Hello <%= generate_full_name(@first_name, @last_name) %>!</mj-text>
</mj-column>
</mj-section>
</mj-body>
</mjml>
In order to render the email you would then call: FunctionTemplate.render(first_name: "Alex", last_name: "Koutmos")
In addition to compiling single MJML EEx templates, you can also create MJML partials and include them
in other MJML templates AND components using the special render_static_component
function. With the following
modules:
defmodule FunctionTemplate do
use MjmlEEx, mjml_template: "component_template.mjml.eex"
end
defmodule HeadBlock do
use MjmlEEx.Component
@impl true
def render(_opts) do
"""
<mj-head>
<mj-title>Hello world!</mj-title>
<mj-font name="Roboto" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Montserrat:300,400,500"></mj-font>
</mj-head>
"""
end
end
And the following template:
<mjml>
<%= render_static_component HeadBlock %>
<mj-body>
<mj-section>
<mj-column>
<mj-divider border-color="#F45E43"></mj-divider>
<mj-text font-size="20px" color="#F45E43">Hello <%= generate_full_name(@first_name, @last_name) %>!</mj-text>
</mj-column>
</mj-section>
</mj-body>
</mjml>
Be sure to look at the MjmlEEx.Component
module for additional usage information as you can also pass options to your
template and use them when generating the partial string. One thing to note is that when using
render_static_component
, the data that is passed to the component must be defined at compile time. This means that you
cannot use any assigns that would bee to be evaluated at runtime. For example, this would raise an error:
<mj-text>
<%= render_static_component MyTextComponent, some_data: @some_data %>
</mj-text>
If you need to render your components dynamically, use render_dynamic_component
instead and be sure to configure your
template module like so to generate the email HTML at runtime:
def MyTemplate do
use MjmlEEx, mode: :runtime
end
Often times, you'll want to create an Email skeleton or layout using MJML, and then inject your template into that layout. MJML EEx supports this functionality which makes it really easy to have business branded emails application wide without having to copy and paste the same boilerplate in every template.
To create a layout, define a layout module like so:
defmodule BaseLayout do
use MjmlEEx.Layout, mjml_layout: "base_layout.mjml.eex"
end
And an accompanying layout like so:
<mjml>
<mj-head>
<mj-title>Say hello to card</mj-title>
<mj-font name="Roboto" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Montserrat:300,400,500"></mj-font>
<mj-attributes>
<mj-all font-family="Montserrat, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif"></mj-all>
<mj-text font-weight="400" font-size="16px" color="#000000" line-height="24px"></mj-text>
<mj-section padding="<%= @padding %>"></mj-section>
</mj-attributes>
</mj-head>
<%= @inner_content %>
</mjml>
As you can see, you can include assigns in your layout template (like @padding
), but you also need to
include a mandatory @inner_content
expression. That way, MJML EEx knowns where to inject your template
into the layout. With that in place, you just need to tell your template module what layout to use (if
you are using a layout that is):
defmodule MyTemplate do
use MjmlEEx,
mjml_template: "my_template.mjml.eex",
layout: BaseLayout
end
And your template file can contain merely the parts that you need for that particular template:
<mj-body> ... </mj-body>
MJML EEx has support for both the 1st party NodeJS compiler and the 3rd party Rust compiler. By default, MJML EEx uses the Rust compiler as there is an Elixir NIF built with Rustler that packages the Rust library for easy use: mjml_nif. By default the Rust compiler is used as it does not require you to have NodeJS available.
In order to use the NodeJS compiler, you can provide the following configuration in your config.exs
file:
config :mjml_eex, compiler: MjmlEEx.Compilers.Node
Be sure to check out the documentation for the MjmlEEx.Compilers.Node
module as it also requires some
additional set up.
- The logo for the project is an edited version of an SVG image from the unDraw project
- The Elixir MJML library that this library builds on top of MJML
- The Rust MRML library that provides the MJML compilation functionality MRML