NAME
Catalyst::View::Email::Template - Send Templated Email from Catalyst
SYNOPSIS
Sends templated mail, based upon your default view. It captures the output of the rendering path, slurps in based on mime-types and assembles a multi-part email using Email::MIME::Creator and sends it out.
CONFIGURATION
WARNING: since version 0.10 the configuration options slightly changed!
Use the helper to create your view:
$ script/myapp_create.pl view Email::Template Email::Template
For basic configuration look at "CONFIGURATION" in Catalyst::View::Email.
In your app configuration (example in YAML):
View::Email::Template:
# Optional prefix to look somewhere under the existing configured
# template paths.
# Default: none
template_prefix: email
# Define the defaults for the mail
default:
# Defines the default view used to render the templates.
# If none is specified neither here nor in the stash
# Catalysts default view is used.
# Warning: if you don't tell Catalyst explicit which of your views should
# be its default one, C::V::Email::Template may choose the wrong one!
view: TT
SENDING EMAIL
Sending email works just like for Catalyst::View::Email but by specifying the template instead of the body and forwarding to your Email::Template view:
sub controller : Private {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->stash->{email} = {
to => 'jshirley@gmail.com',
cc => 'abraxxa@cpan.org',
bcc => 'hidden@secret.com hidden2@foobar.com',
from => 'no-reply@foobar.com',
subject => 'I am a Catalyst generated email',
template => 'test.tt',
content_type => 'multipart/alternative'
};
$c->forward( $c->view('Email::Template') );
}
Alternatively if you want more control over your templates you can use the following idiom to override the defaults:
templates => [
{
template => 'email/test.html.tt',
content_type => 'text/html',
charset => 'utf-8',
view => 'TT',
},
{
template => 'email/test.plain.mason',
content_type => 'text/plain',
charset => 'utf-8',
view => 'Mason',
}
]
HANDLING ERRORS
See "HANDLING ERRORS" in Catalyst::View::Email.
METHODS
- generate_part
-
Generates a MIME part to include in the email. Since the email is template based every template piece is a separate part that is included in the email.
- process
-
The process method is called when the view is dispatched to. This creates the multipart message and then sends the message contents off to Catalyst::View::Email for processing, which in turn hands off to Email::Sender::Simple.
TODO
ATTACHMENTS
There needs to be a method to support attachments. What I am thinking is something along these lines:
attachments => [
# Set the body to a file handle object, specify content_type and
# the file name. (name is what it is sent at, not the file)
{ body => $fh, name => "foo.pdf", content_type => "application/pdf" },
# Or, specify a filename that is added, and hey, encoding!
{ filename => "foo.gif", name => "foo.gif", content_type => "application/pdf", encoding => "quoted-printable" },
# Or, just a path to a file, and do some guesswork for the content type
"/path/to/somefile.pdf",
]
SEE ALSO
Catalyst::View::Email - Send plain boring emails with Catalyst
Catalyst::Manual - The Catalyst Manual
Catalyst::Manual::Cookbook - The Catalyst Cookbook
AUTHORS
J. Shirley <jshirley@gmail.com>
Simon Elliott <cpan@browsing.co.uk>
Alexander Hartmaier <abraxxa@cpan.org>
LICENSE
This library is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.