Sin descripción

Mikael Koli f65b152c59 requirements: add openpyxl to soft dependencies hace 4 años
.github 8419cc7c5d Update issue templates hace 4 años
docs 648b2df6c9 docs: small tweak in docs home page hace 4 años
redmail cb4ca42f8b test: fix pandas Excel attachment test hace 4 años
requirements f65b152c59 requirements: add openpyxl to soft dependencies hace 4 años
.coveragerc 693e185ff1 pkg: add codecov hace 4 años
.gitattributes 4d0402d493 pkg: add packaging and setup files hace 4 años
.gitignore 4d0402d493 pkg: add packaging and setup files hace 4 años
LICENSE ea339454e4 Create LICENSE hace 4 años
MANIFEST.in 4e69b9cc6a pkg: added text templates and test files hace 4 años
README.md 22592e7a37 README: fixed examples and add more hace 4 años
requirements.txt f65b152c59 requirements: add openpyxl to soft dependencies hace 4 años
setup.cfg 4d0402d493 pkg: add packaging and setup files hace 4 años
setup.py 89792f820b pkg: updated PyPI classifiers hace 4 años
tox.ini d28a6f5f6f ci: fix tox hace 4 años
versioneer.py 2966ecd133 pkg: Some weird issues in versioneer hace 4 años

README.md

Red Mail

Next generation email sender


Pypi version build codecov Documentation Status PyPI pyversions

What is it?

Red Mail is an advanced email sender library. It makes sending emails trivial and has a lot of advanced features such as:

See more from the documentations or see release from PyPI.

Install it from PyPI:

pip install redmail

Why Red Mail?

Sending emails SHOULD NOT be this complicated:

import smtplib
from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart
from email.mime.text import MIMEText

msg = MIMEMultipart('alternative')
msg['Subject'] = 'An example email'
msg['From'] = 'first.last@gmail.com'
msg['To'] = 'first.last@example.com'

part1 = MIMEText("Hello!", 'plain')
part2 = MIMEText("<h1>Hello!</h1>", 'html')

msg.attach(part1)
msg.attach(part2)

# Send the message via our own SMTP server.
s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost', port=0)
s.send_message(msg)
s.quit()

With Red Mail, it is simple as this:

from redmail import EmailSender

email = EmailSender(host="localhost", port=0)

email.send(
    subject="An example email",
    sender="me@example.com",
    receivers=['first.last@example.com'],
    text="Hello!",
    html="<h1>Hello!</h1>"
)

You can also do more advanced things easily with it:

from redmail import EmailSender

email = EmailSender(
    host="localhost", port=0,
    user_name="me@example.com", password="<PASSWORD>"
)

email.send(
    subject="An example email",
    sender="me@example.com",

    # Recipients
    receivers=['first.last@example.com'],
    cc=["also@example.com"],
    bcc=["external@example.com"],

    # Body of the email
    html="""<h1>Hello {{ friend }}!</h1>
        <p>Have you seen this thing:</p>
        {{ awesome_image }}
        <p>Or this:</p>
        {{ pretty_table }}
        <p>Or this plot:</p>
        {{ a_plot }}
        <p>Kind regards, {{ sender.full_name }}</p>
    """,

    # Content that is embed to the body
    body_params={'friend': 'Jack'},
    body_images={
        'awesome_image': 'path/to/image.png',
        'a_plot': plt.Figure(...)
    },
    body_tables={
        'pretty_table': pd.DataFrame(...)
    },

    # Attachments of the email
    attachments={
        'some_data.csv': pd.DataFrame(...),
        'file_content.html': '<h1>This is an attachment</h1>',
        'a_file.txt': pathlib.Path('path/to/file.txt')
    }
)

See more practical example in cookbook.


Author

  • Mikael Koli - Miksus - koli.mikael@gmail.com