Email Management with templating capability. The templates use Mustache template under the hood so you can do everything that the template system allow you to do.
We need to setup Swoosh
adapter to be able to send the emails and the database
for save the templates.
# In your config files
config :straw_hat_mailer, StrawHat.Mailer,
# Swoosh.Adapters.Local for development
adapter: Swoosh.Adapters.Sendgrid,
api_key: "SG.x.x"
StrawHat.Mailer.Template
have all the functionalities for managing the
templates, so check the module for more information.
You could use seed.exs
or just use iex -S mix
for interactive terminal.
{:ok, welcome_template} = StrawHat.Mailer.Template.create_template(%{
name: "welcome",
owner_id: "system:my_app",
privacy: StrawHat.Mailer.Privacy.public(),
title: "Welcome to My App",
subject: "Welcome to My App",
html: """
<h1>Welcome to My App {{data.full_name}}</h1>
""",
text: """
Welcome to My App {{data.full_name}}
"""
})
You could also use partials on your template so you could share sections of your email template, most of the time you will use this for the header and footer so it is easier to update at any time your templates without much afford.
Let's create the partials.
{:ok, header_partial} = StrawHat.Mailer.Partial.create_partial(%{
name: "company_header",
owner_id: "system:my_app",
privacy: StrawHat.Mailer.Privacy.public(),
html: """
<header>
<h1>My App</h1>
<h2>The Tag line</h2>
</header>
""",
text: """
My header is Awesome
The Tag line
"""
})
{:ok, footer_partial} = StrawHat.Mailer.Partial.create_partial(%{
name: "company_footer",
owner_id: "system:my_app",
privacy: StrawHat.Mailer.Privacy.public(),
html: """
<footer>
<p>Contact ACME for bug report BrokeBack</p>
</footer>
""",
text: """
Contact ACME for bug report BrokeBack
"""
})
Now we just need to add the partials to the template.
{:ok, welcome_template} =
StrawHat.Mailer.Template.get_template_by_name("welcome")
StrawHat.Mailer.Template.add_partials(welcome_template, [
header_partial,
footer_partial
])
Now you can start using your partials in your template.
{:ok, welcome_template} =
StrawHat.Mailer.Template.get_template_by_name("welcome")
StrawHat.Mailer.Template.update_template(welcome_template, %{
html: """
{{{partials.company_header}}}
<h1>Welcome to My App {{data.full_name}}</h1>
{{{partials.footer_header}}}
""",
text: """
{{{partials.company_header}}}
Welcome to My App {{data.full_name}}
{{{partials.footer_header}}}
"""
})
And you are good to go.
StrawHat.Mailer
uses Swoosh
under the hood. The next example shows how to create
an email using specific template.
defmodule MyApp do
def send_welcome_email(to, data) do
from = {"ACME", "[email protected]"}
response =
from
|> StrawHat.Mailer.Email.new(to)
|> StrawHat.Mailer.Email.with_template("welcome", data)
case response do
{:ok, email} -> StrawHat.Mailer.deliver(email)
error -> error
end
end
end
# Later on
to = {"User Name", "[email protected]"}
data = %{
"full_name" => "My name is Jeff"
}
MyApp.send_welcome_email(to, data)
All the APIs are contain in the business use cases are under Use Cases
documentation section. Check the available modules and the public API.
You should be able to comprehend the API by reading the type spec and the function name. Please open an issue or even better make pull request about the documation if you have any issues with it.
Since this library does not have any repository, it does not run any migration. You will need to handle the migrations on your application that contains the repository.
The migrations
directory contains a series of migrations that should cover
the common use cases.
Note
Each migration module has a
Created at
timestamp, this information is useful to decide when and the order on which the migrations should be run.
After creating an Ecto migration in your project you could call one of the
migrations from your change
callback in your module.
defmodule MyApp.Repo.Migrations.CreatePartialsTable do
use Ecto.Migration
def change do
StrawHat.Mailer.Migrations.CreatePartialsTable.change()
end
end