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browser-mjml-validator

v4.6.7

Published

browser-mjml-validator

Downloads

21

Readme

Validating MJML

MJML provides a validation layer that helps you building your email. It can detect if you misplaced or mispelled a MJML component, or if you used any unauthorised attribute on a specific component. It supports 3 levels of validation:

  • skip: your document is rendered without going through validation
  • soft: your document is going through validation and is rendered, even if it has errors
  • strict: your document is going through validation and is not rendered if it has any error

By default, the level is set to soft.

In CLI

When using the mjml command line, you can add the option -c.validationLevel or --config.validationLevel with the validation level you want.

Set the validation level to skip (so that the file is not validated) and render the file

mjml --config.validationLevel=skip template.mjml

Alternatively, you can just validate file without rendering it by add ing the --validate option

mjml --validate template.mjml

In Javascript

In Javascript, you can provide the level through the options parameters on mjml2html. Ex: mjml2html(inputMJML, { validationLevel: 'strict' })

strict will raise a MJMLValidationError exception. This object has 2 methods:

  • getErrors returns an array of objects with line, message, tagName as well as a formattedMessage which contains the line, message and tagName concatenated in a sentence.
  • getMessages returns an array of formattedMessage.

When using soft, no exception will be raised. You can get the errors in the object returned by mjml2html. It is the same object returned by getErrors on strict mode.