# Responsive HTML email signature(s) [![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/responsive-html-email-signature.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/responsive-html-email-signature) [![license](https://img.shields.io/github/license/danmindru/responsive-html-email-signature.svg)](/LICENSE) ### Let's punch email clients in the stomach 👊 When you need some basic responsive email signatures that work on mobile.
...and your colleagues need them too.
...but you don't want to deal with tables and inline styles. [Read the docs in other languages](/i18n) ↗️ ## Preview Here are some examples: ![responsive emails-01](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1515742/10591900/13889d32-76b9-11e5-8dc0-b89d80189e93.png) ![responsive emails-02](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1515742/10591901/139c4954-76b9-11e5-80f7-5b0ccaf5af81.png) ## Getting started - Clone repo `git clone https://github.com/danmindru/responsive-html-email-signature.git` - Run `npm install` - Run `gulp` to generate templates from configuration (one time) ### Customizing templates - Edit files in */templates* - Run `gulp watch` to watch templates and re-generate when changed - Open files from `./dist` in your fav browser to check them out > When you're done, check out [how to add them to your email client of choice](#usage-with-different-email-clients) if in doubt. ## Motivation Writing HTML emails & email signatures sucks. Let's make it easier. We can't fix all email clients, but we can surely make our lives easier with some automation.
## What does this pile of code do - [x] generates email templates from your config - [x] allows generating multiple templates at once (for your colleagues too!) - [x] transforms linked (``) CSS into inline styles - [x] embeds local `img[src]` into the template (base64).* - [x] minifies the template - [x] ads some basic media queries for mail clients that support them - [x] can build templates from multiple sources - [x] watches HTML / CSS files for changes and re-builds - [x] supports LESS / SASS / PostCSS - [x] autoprefixer, so you don't have to worry about your `-moz-`s or `-webkit-`s **Some mail clients don't support them, so an external URL might be a good idea. Also, some clients might complain about the size, so keep an eye out.* ## Docs ### Installing ```bash $ npm install $ gulp # By default, HTML & CSS files in './src' will be watched for changes ``` > Note: it's built using node v8.x, so please make sure your node.js version is up to date. Version 6+ should be fine. ### Configuring To make a basic email from existing templates, you only have to edit the `conf.json` file in each template. For example, the dark template accepts the following: ```json { "id": "", "signature": "", "name": "", "contactMain": "", "contactMail": "", "slogan": "", "logoUrl": "", "logoAlt": "", "website": "" } ``` ### Generating multiple emails from the same config (for your colleagues too!) Use an array instead of object in `conf.json`, having multiple configs like the one above: ```json [ {...conf1}, {...conf2} ] ``` ### Using config values in HTML Config variables are made available in all HTML files.
Add any variable to the configuration file and use it in HTML like so: ```html

``` > NB: config variables accept HTML. ### Adding CSS & pre-processing Any number of CSS, SASS or LESS files in a template directory & they will be automatically processed & inlined into the files outputed in `./dist`. ### Multiple emails in the same template Templates can contain multiple HTML files from which to build emails. For example, the dark template has `signature.html` and `signature-reply.html`, which is a simpler version. Each HTML file will be treated as an email template, except for `*.inc.html`. See below ⬇️ ### Partials (*.inc.html) If you indeed have multiple emails in the same templates, you can be sure some of the HTML repeats. Luckily, partials can be used for common parts (i.e. headers, footers). Partials *will not* be treated as an email template, but ignored when built. They can however be included in other HTML files, like so: ```html
`conf.js`. ![Responsive HTML email template/signatures diagram](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1515742/45000195-35268300-afc3-11e8-82b4-7507430c48a0.png) ## CSS Support Remember, it's HTML mails, so you need to check a big-ass table to find out nothing's gonna work. See [this](https://www.campaignmonitor.com/css/) for more info. [Gulp-inline-css](https://www.npmjs.com/package/gulp-inline-css) is being used to convert whatever CSS you throw at it to inline styles, but it probably won't handle everything. Some bonuses of using `gulp-inline-css`: many css props will be converted to attributes. For example, the 'background-color' prop will be added as 'bgcolor' attribute to table elements. For more details take a look at the [inline-css mappings](https://github.com/jonkemp/inline-css/blob/master/lib/setTableAttrs.js). ## Usage with different email clients ### Thunderbird There are several Thunderbird plugins which can automatically insert signatures when composing e-mails. We recommend [SmartTemplate4](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/thunderbird/addon/smarttemplate4) as one of the options. It can use different templates for new e-mails, replies and forwarded e-mails. ### Gmail Go to your mailbox settings & paste the generated signature. > **NB**: Gmail doesn't seem to support inlined (base64) images. You have to use absolute `http(s)//...` from them to load up. ### Office 365 / outlook.live.com It's a bit hacky to set up, but possible. See [this issue](https://github.com/danmindru/responsive-html-email-signature/issues/52). ### Apple Mail / OS X (oh boy) #### Solution 1 - Open Mail.app and go to `Mail` -> `Preferences` -> `Signatures` - Create a new signature and write some placeholder text (doesn't matter what it is, but you have to identify it later). - Close Mail.app. - Open terminal, then open the signature files using TextEdit (might be different for iCloud drive check the article below). ``` $ open -a TextEdit ~/Library/Mobile\ Documents/com~apple~mail/Data/V3/MailData/Signatures/ubiquitous_*.mailsignature ``` - Keep the file with the placeholder open, close the other ones. - Replace the `...` and it's contents with the template of your choice. *Don't remove the meta information at the top!* - Open Mail.app and compose a new mail. Select the signature from the list to test it out. > **NB**: Images won't appear in the signature preview, but will work fine when you compose a message. #### Solution 2 You can also open the HTML files in `/dist` in a browser, CMD + A, CMD + C and then paste into the signature box. This won't copy the `` part or the `