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premailer

Travis

Turns CSS blocks into style attributes

When you send HTML emails you can't used style tags but instead you have to put inline style attributes on every element. So from this:

    <html>
    <style type="text/css">
    h1 { border:1px solid black }
    p { color:red;}
    </style>
    <h1 style="font-weight:bolder">Peter</h1>
    <p>Hej</p>
    </html>

You want this:

    <html>
    <h1 style="font-weight:bolder; border:1px solid black">Peter</h1>
    <p style="color:red">Hej</p>
    </html>

premailer does this. It parses an HTML page, looks up style blocks and parses the CSS. It then uses the lxml.html parser to modify the DOM tree of the page accordingly.

Getting started

If you havena't already done so, install premailer first:

    $ pip install premailer

Next, the most basic use is to use the shortcut function, like this:

    >>> from premailer import transform
    >>> print transform("""
    ...         <html>
    ...         <style type="text/css">
    ...         h1 { border:1px solid black }
    ...         p { color:red;}
    ...         p::first-letter { float:left; }
    ...         </style>
    ...         <h1 style="font-weight:bolder">Peter</h1>
    ...         <p>Hej</p>
    ...         </html>
    ... """)
    <html>
    <head></head>
    <body>
    <h1 style="font-weight:bolder; border:1px solid black">Peter</h1>
            <p style="color:red">Hej</p>
            </body>
    </html>

For more advanced options, check out the code of the Premailer class and all its options in its constructor.

You can also use premailer from the command line by using his main module.

$ python -m premailer -h
usage: python -m premailer [options]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -f [INFILE], --file [INFILE]
                        Specifies the input file. The default is stdin.
  -o [OUTFILE], --output [OUTFILE]
                        Specifies the output file. The default is stdout.
  --base-url BASE_URL
  --remove-internal-links PRESERVE_INTERNAL_LINKS
                        Remove links that start with a '#' like anchors.
  --exclude-pseudoclasses
                        Pseudo classes like p:last-child', p:first-child, etc
  --preserve-style-tags
                        Do not delete <style></style> tags from the html
                        document.
  --remove-star-selectors
                        All wildcard selectors like '* {color: black}' will be
                        removed.
  --remove-classes      Remove all class attributes from all elements
  --strip-important     Remove '!important' for all css declarations.

A basic example:

$ python -m premailer --base-url=http://google.com/ -f newsletter.html
<html>
<head><style>.heading { color:red; }</style></head>
<body><h1 class="heading" style="color:red"><a href="http://google.com/">Title</a></h1></body>
</html>

The command line interface supports standard input.

$ echo '<style>.heading { color:red; }</style><h1 class="heading"><a href="/">Title</a></h1>' | python -m premailer --base-url=http://google.com/
<html>
<head><style>.heading { color:red; }</style></head>
<body><h1 class="heading" style="color:red"><a href="http://google.com/">Title</a></h1></body>
</html>

Turning relative URLs into absolute URLs

Another thing premailer can do for you is to turn relative URLs (e.g. "/some/page.html" into "http://www.peterbe.com/some/page.html"). It does this to all href and src attributes that don't have a :// part in it. For example, turning this:

    <html>
    <body>
    <a href="/">Home</a>
    <a href="page.html">Page</a>
    <a href="http://crosstips.org">External</a>
    <img src="/folder/">Folder</a>
    </body>
    </html>

Into this:

    <html>
    <body>
    <a href="http://www.peterbe.com/">Home</a>
    <a href="http://www.peterbe.com/page.html">Page</a>
    <a href="http://crosstips.org">External</a>
    <img src="http://www.peterbe.com/folder/">Folder</a>
    </body>
    </html>

by using transform('...', base_url='http://www.peterbe.com/').

HTML attributes created additionally

Certain HTML attributes are also created on the HTML if the CSS contains any ones that are easily translated into HTML attributes. For example, if you have this CSS: td { background-color:#eee; } then this is transformed into style="background-color:#eee" AND as an HTML attribute bgcolor="#eee".

Having these extra attributes basically as a "back up" for really shit email clients that can't even take the style attributes. A lot of professional HTML newsletters such as Amazon's use this.

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