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By using MJML components, you will be able to focus on the content rather than on the tricky - and annoying - part of the style. From low-level components such as to higher-level components like, there’s a component for that.

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Write high-level code through extensible and reusable components.

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Email clients update their specs and requirements regularly, but we geek about that stuff - we’ll stay on top of it so you can spend less time reading up on latest email client updates and more time coding. Your MJML will always be up-to-date and responsive. Building a responsive email is super easy with tags such as and. Say goodbye to endless HTML table nesting or email client specific CSS. Get your speed and productivity boosted with MJML’s semantic syntax. MJML rolls up all of what the Mailjet Developer team has learned about HTML email design over the past few years and abstracts the whole layer of complexity related to responsive email design. And that’s how MJML was born.Īfter learning so much from our users, we wanted to give back to the community by sharing this open-source framework to make responsive email easier and redefine the coding experience once and for all.

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The team started by creating a new markup language that would abstract the complexity of responsive HTML and automatically generate it. This means that finding a way to code responsive email easily and quickly is pretty important. Having been knee deep in email for five years, the Mailjet team saw two things: a) email HTML is antiquated and not developer friendly b) a growing trend of email being viewed on mobile and tablet and the number of screens is only increasing. MJML was created in early 2015 by a team of Mailjet developers while they were working on Passport, Mailjet’s drag-and-drop interface for creating responsive emails. Why we set out to tackle the challenge of coding responsive email Guess what happens if that’s where you added your CSS? Yes, it’s removed.īottom line is, responsive email is hard and it’s even harder to use HTML to guarantee beautiful, user-friendly email that displays exactly the way you want no matter where it lands. Gmail for example, removes the entire header section of your email’s HTML. Each client renders HTML in its own way and some don’t even support HTML, which can cause delivery issues. The tricky thing is though, that HTML for email is very different from the HTML you might have come to know (and perhaps love) from the web.

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That’s why responsive email design is so important. With all of these variables of where your email could land, it can be stressful to create a one-size-fits-all email design.

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On top of that, there are a lot of email clients out there. Beyond the third screen (mobile), we’re moving onto smart watches and possibly even VR devices! According to Litmus, mobile now represents no less than 50% of where email is read. These days, we email everywhere - standing up, sitting down, sleeping.and on a ton of devices too.















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