The components handle the heavy lifting of compatibility and client inconsistency so designers and developers can focus on building impactful and engaging templates.
Everything to know about the components, props, and usage is available within our Documentation Site. Please give that a read and let us know if there's anything we can help with.
The packages and components that make up JSX email require an LTS Node version (v18.0.0+) and React v18.2.0+
A list of available components can be found on the jsx-email
Documentation
The goals of this project are to provide an improved focus on Developer Experience, maintenance, fast improvements and fast releases. As such, we feel that jsx-email
has a number of improvements and advantages over react-email
. Those include:
- Email Client Compatibility Checking
- Crazy fast Tailwind support
- Support for
<Suspense>
andasync
within Components - Exclusive Components
- Enhanced Developer Experience (DX)
- Better Command Line tools
- Works with Monorepos out of the box. No exhaustive setup needed.
- Less complex, smoother Preview Server
- Faster improvements, feature development, and releases
- Community-driven maintenance rather than company-planning priority
- No vendor lock-in for tools.
jsx-email
uses only generic components and tools
Email built and rendered with JSX email can be used with any email provider that provides an API for sending email as a String
.
This includes AWS SES, Loops, Nodemailer, Postmark,Resend, Plunk, and SendGrid. See our documentation on Email Providers for more info and example usage.
We 💛 contributions! After all, this is a community-driven project. We have no corporate sponsorship or backing. The maintainers and users keep this project going!
Please check out our Contribution Guide.
This project was built upon prior work for react-email
by Bu Kinoshita (@Joker) and Bruce Wayne (@Batman).
jsx-email
is a fork of react-email
.
We (the maintainers) use JSX email daily. This fork was originally created as a canary channel for fixes from pull requests and issues that had been left unaddressed. JSX email grew faster, and the upstream team didn't give the project the love we felt it needed. When our help wasn't accepted, we felt a new direction was warranted.