The enhanced emails plugin allows users to send html-enriched emails and use email themes.
Author: | Wojtek Szkutnik (profile at wordpress.org) |
WordPress version required: | 2.7 |
WordPress version tested: | 3.2.1 |
Plugin version: | 0.2 |
Added to WordPress repository: | 22-07-2011 |
Last updated: | 25-08-2011
Warning! This plugin has not been updated in over 2 years. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.
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Rating, %: | 0 |
Rated by: | 0 |
Plugin URI: | http://wojtekszkutnik.com |
Total downloads: | 1 622 |
Active installs: | 10+ |
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This plugin is in early development stage. Expect bugs.
FAQ
Will the plugin break my current site?
This is highly unlikely to happen. The plugin enhances the way WordPress handles e-mail notifications, but it does it in a unobtrusive way. Basically, it provides a wrapper for wp_mail, which can be used for e-mail notifications. If you did override any pluggable email notification functions, make sure to use eemails_wp_mail instead of wp_mail in order to make use of the plugin functionality.
How can I create my own e-mail theme?
It’s easy – just put your email.php theme file inside your current WP theme directory (if you put it inside wp-content it should work as well, but it’s bad practice).
How does template hierarchy work for e-mails?
An example email template name looks like this: email-action1-action2. The plugin tries to locate email-action1-action2.php in your theme folder, and if it fails – it tries to use email.php from your theme. If this fails, too, the plugin will use its default email-action1-action2.php template, or if it doesn’t exist – just emails.php.
ChangeLog
0.1
Basic functionalities added.
0.2
- Refactored template hierarchy
- Added output sanitization
- Removed output buffering
- Added a general layout to avoid code duplication
- Theme CSS improvements
- Adjusted wp_mail wrapper to exactly fit the argument structure
- Improved documentation