Currently, we have contributions from more than 80 developers, including Jack (Steele, Knak’s Senior Developer). Anyone comfortable with HTML code can pick up MJML and use it easily, and then help us make it better. We figured that if we built it and made it open-source, others would be able to use it, and it would benefit the whole community. We wanted to create a framework that eliminates the need to write custom code for each of those things.Īt Mailjet, we have a great interface, but we need to produce code that’s valid and clean so emails will look good across all clients. Emails even render differently across the same email client on a Mac, PC, iPhone, or Android. There are so many email clients and browsers – Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook, Chrome, Firefox, etc – and there are no consistent rendering standards. NG: Email coding is a pain, and it’s even worse to try to code responsive emails. It’s open-source, so anyone can use it and then help us improve it as well. NG: Essentially, it’s an intermediate markup language that’s used before emails are rendered to HTML that makes them responsive and easy to code. It’s extendability and solid documentation has allowed us to make use of the library to generate high quality email HTML output from our email builder.” – Jack Steele, Knak Developer/Email Specialist “MJML has been an incredibly useful resource in our recent feature development. He’s currently working from home in his NYC apartment and was glad to sit down for a chat. We recently spent some time with Nicolas Garnier, Senior Product Manager at Mailjet (acquired by Mailgun) and the creator of MJML, to get his thoughts on the future of email development.
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