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mailstring

v0.4.1

Published

Generate mailto strings for fun and profit

Downloads

1,033

Readme

Mailstring

Build Status react-string-replace.js on NPM

Generate mailto: strings for fun and profit

Install

$ npm install --save mailstring

Usage

ES6

import { mailTo } from 'mailstring';

mailTo('[email protected]');
// => 'mailto:[email protected]'

mailTo('[email protected],[email protected]');
// => 'mailto:[email protected],[email protected]';

mailTo('[email protected]', {
  cc: '[email protected]',
  bcc: '[email protected]',
  subject: 'hello',
  body: 'something',
});
// => 'mailto:[email protected][email protected]&[email protected]&subject=hello&body=something';

CommonJS / Node

const mailTo = require('mailstring').mailTo;

API

NOTE: The mailto: API only allows you to set defaults in a new email window. The user can manually change any of the values you provide once the email window has opened.

mailTo(address, [options])

address

Type: string

Email address or list of email addresses to prepopulate when the user clicks the link. Multiple email addresses should be comma-separated.

options

cc

Type: string

Email address(es) to add to the CC field in the email window.

bcc

Type: string

Email address(es) to add to the BCC field in the email window.

subject

Type: string

Subject to prepopulate in the email window. Special characters will be escaped using encodeURIComponent.

body

Type: string

Email body to prepopulate in the email window. Special characters will be escaped using encodeURIComponent. The body may contain multiple paragraphs separated by newlines, however, not every email client supports this. For example, in my testing newlines are supported fine in Apple Mail but not in Nylas N1. Just keep this in mind and if in doubt test out your link in the client of your choice.

mailstring/react

Mailstring also exports a React component for your convenience if using React. Don't worry, React is not bundled with mailstring so you will not bloat your codebase by simply requiring the mailTo function, and if you do wish to use the React component you will need React installed as a peerDependency.

Usage

See the example/ directory for the full example.

import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';

// Import the React Component
import { MailToLink } from 'mailstring/react';

const body = `
Dear so and so,

This is a nice multiline message. It contains more than one paragraph.

Pretty slick, eh?

- Person
`.trim();

class App extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <div className='App'>
        <h1>Hey there</h1>
        <MailToLink
          to='[email protected]'
          cc='[email protected],[email protected]'
          bcc='[email protected]'
          subject='Nice to meet you'
          body={body}
        >
          Email Me
        </MailToLink>
      </div>
    );
  }
}

TODO

  • [ ] Do not package React with the mailstring/react component
  • [ ] Test MailToLink using enzyme
  • [ ] Document MailToLink

License

MIT © Ian Sinnott