Is it possible to stop Email Clients (iPhone, Mail.app, Sparrow..) from auto-linking or otherwise changing the style of dates in an email.
I want to style date/timestamps in emails as a light unassuming gray - however most mail clients turn this into a link with the traditional underline/blue combo. I am interested in blocking this from the HTML side if possible.
I'm assuming that the issue is that they change the style - you end up with blue underlined phone numbers, for example.
Some clients have a custom meta-tag to let you do this. e.g. for Mail.app and iOS:
<meta name="format-detection" content="telephone=no" />
However, others don't. What you can do instead is add your own link and style that to appear exactly the same as the text around it.
Related
Quick question, is it ok to use standard HTML anchor links within a html emailer? Its to be used as a jump link to content within the e-mail. Wondered if anyone had any experience of this and whether they had come across any issues / pitfalls? It's come from a client request. Only thing I can think of is that the link colour may be over-ridden in some email clients.
Anchor links work to some degree in email clients. Outlook in particular is notorious and had jumps to a different places. iOS and others were fine.
I'm finishing up a Mailchimp template and Gmail is the biggest headache now.
In my head I have some styles (css) and media queries. If I put the media-queries at the bottom - it stops most of the styles from getting through. If I put the media queries at the top - all my styles work perfectly but the mail looks "broken down" (like it should under 600px width / Mobile) like the media queries already kicked in.
Firstly I didn't think Gmail should read anything inside of a media-query and secondly why are is my mail shown "responsive" when I have full browser width?
---- on a side note ---- I know I can go through everything and add inline styles but, I have three templates and I'd rather not if I can get away with it :)
I found out through extensive google-ing that I'm not the only one in the world that had this (weird) problem. I quote Lucas Mainardi below that posted an answer to a similar problem for Outlook.com.
Basically, putting an extra style tag with your media queries just before the closing body tag will fix things.
I've tested on my devices (gmail, iphone, thunderbird) and it doesn't seem to do any damage for clients that didn't have problems before. I'm also waiting for my Mailchimp inbox inspections to finish (where I test more clients like Outlook, Android etc). I'll edit my answer if it seems to do any harm, otherwise consider this a solution.
Hello James,
In the comments bellow I posted a possible solution to this issue in Outlook.com.
The problem seems to be the area in which the email is loaded. Apparently, the area starts out in a small size and is resized a few seconds later, but in that time the media queries fire up and display the mobile version. This is because the media queries are read first in the hierarchy of the code (they're at the head section) and the HTML email is read second.
The solution I found is to place the style section which contains the media queries after the HTML e-mail, specifically right above the closing body tag.
I tried this out in Litmus and all seemed to work just fine across the board (no other browsers/mobile devices/e-mail servers seem to be affected negatively, displaying the exact same version of the email with the styles in the head section).
Taken from http://emailwizardry.nightjar.com.au/2013/08/28/media-queries-in-html-email-cover-all-your-bases/
Im making a email template and they wanna put background images underneath the text - and to most email clients that is a no no.
So i tough can you make a fallback to the clients that don't support it?
Or is their a hack to make it work?
On this picture you got a list over css support
also see this link
There is a technique that is supported by all major clients: emailbg.net. The VML is a hack for Outlook which doesn't support CSS background images (except in the body tag).
You should always set a bgcolor however as most clients load with images disabled.
I have a template which i used for sending emails written purely in hand made with css, and then i tested in Firefox/InternetExplorer/Chrome browser. But when i send that email to My boss PC as he is always Microsoft outlook user.
He always gets the alignment broken, texts broken all problems start. My question is how do you really write then? None of the web browser showing my template wrong.
I searched a lot, but most answers are not deeply and correctly well answered about this. I would really appreciate some experts input on this.
Thanks
outlook uses an older version of Trident, the CSS rendering engine. Depending on what Outlook your boss is on, the worse it can get. Outlook 2010 actually reverted to an older version of Trident because of Microsoft losing the Anti-trust case with the EU, so whatever version was before 2010 actually renders better, however they are both quite subpar # best.
you're going to want to literally stop developing with modern html/css and fall back on old school table layouts. i know, its gross, but you're going to have to do it for email.
the best tests are native, but if you don't have access to both versions (not many do) you should check out EmailOnAcid.com, they provide a plethora of email clients you can test on.
constantcontact.com, mailchimp.com and campaignmonitor.com all offer more than testing services if you need anything else.
Outlook 2007 is the bad guy. Any newer or older is much better. In Outlook 2007 lots of CSS commands don't work.
See this page: http://www.email-standards.org/ for details.
However, try sending your emails to Gmail.com and see how it gets displayed in Gmail web interface - Gmail is quite restrictive and as a rule of thumb, if it displays nicely, it should look good in other web clients too.
Some advice regarding HTML emails:
Outlook
It is good to provide width for Outlook, otherwise the CSS may crash.
Outlook doesn't support padding for <div>s / <p>s, float and various other things.
Gmail
For Gmail, you should use inline CSS in preference to defining classes.
Gmail actually parses CSS provided by you and for instance, changes height to min-height so using height is useless. However min-height of <td> is not respected by the browsers, so internal <div>s inside <td>s can be used to assure that min-height was applied.
Gmail strips background images, and generally in all email clients images are displayed upon user request for security reasons. Therefore, wrap images with <div> and set background color and color of this outer div, and provide alt (alternative text) for image (note also that images with empty src do not preserve width and height while rendered by the browser).
Hi I am building a small web based email client. I am facing problems in displaying HTML mails. What are the best practices involved in displaying an HTML mail? Some things I found
Css Reset
Strip body tag in the mail
First of all, it's important to not allow all the CSS and HTML tags. I would look for the file and allow a defined set of HTML tags and CSS attributes.
For example, if you reset the CSS, you can still send stuff like <iframe>, <form> and all other possible malicious tags.
So I would start of thinking what kind of HTML tags would you like to support, and strip all other ones out of it. And then the same for the CSS.
This is by no means easy. I mean you also would have to take in account things like people trying to break your interpreter...
You could look into this Sitepoint Blogpost, it describes how people should code HTML-emails. So it might be a good idea to start there and see what's usually supported.
The one sentence answer would be "1. Use table-based layouts, 2. only inline CSS, and 3. test in every email client possible."
The client testing is probably the most important because every email client (and client + browser combination) may have its own quirks and many are just learned along the way; such as using HTML attributes width & height because Outlook won't always follow the inline styles for width & height, or that Gmail tends to add margins around images unless you explicitly set margin:0 for the HTML elements, etc. etc.
When fixing the look of an HTML email in one client ends up breaking it in another client, don't keep adding more and more styling: try to simplify the HTML/CSS, even if it means writing more markup. For example, if padding and margins don't look right, the same look could be achieved by adding more rows or columns to the table and fixing their heights/widths. More tags is simpler than worrying about how all the email clients will render the CSS box model.
There's a lot of articles and blog posts on HTML-for-email such as http://articles.sitepoint.com/article/code-html-email-newsletters that are helpful -- though a lot are out of date with newer versions of clients.