49

Using the sample code from the GMail API Example: Send Mail, and after following rules for authentication, it's simple enough to send a programmatically generated email, via a gmail account. What isn't obvious from the example is how to set that email to be HTML formatted.


The Question

How do I get HTML formatting in my gmail-api send messages, using python?

I have this...

message_body = "Hello!\nYou've just received a test message!\n\nSincerely,\n-Test Message Generator\n"

and I want it to be this...

Hello!
You've just received a test message!

Sincerely,
-Test Message Generator

Example Source Code from GMail-API

Below is a slightly modified version of the example, but still works:

import argparse
import base64
from pprint import pformat
from pprint import pprint
import httplib2
import os
from email.MIMEMultipart import MIMEMultipart
from email.MIMEText import MIMEText

from apiclient import discovery
from oauth2client import client
from oauth2client import tools
from oauth2client.file import Storage


SCOPES = 'https://mail.google.com/'
CLIENT_SECRET_FILE = 'client_secret.json'
APPLICATION_NAME = 'Test EMail App'


def get_credentials():
    """Gets valid user credentials from storage.

    If nothing has been stored, or if the stored credentials are invalid,
    the OAuth2 flow is completed to obtain the new credentials.

    Returns:
        Credentials, the obtained credential.
    """

    home_dir = os.path.expanduser('~')
    credential_dir = os.path.join(home_dir, '.credentials')
    if not os.path.exists(credential_dir):
        os.makedirs(credential_dir)
    credential_path = os.path.join(credential_dir,
                                   'gmail-python-quickstart.json')

    store = Storage(credential_path)
    credentials = store.get()
    if not credentials or credentials.invalid:
        flow = client.flow_from_clientsecrets(CLIENT_SECRET_FILE, SCOPES)
        flow.user_agent = APPLICATION_NAME
        if flags:
            credentials = tools.run_flow(flow, store, flags)
        else: # Needed only for compatibility with Python 2.6
            credentials = tools.run(flow, store)
        print('Storing credentials to ' + credential_path)
    return credentials

def create_message(sender, to, cc, subject, message_text):
    """Create a message for an email.

    Args:
    sender: Email address of the sender.
    to: Email address of the receiver.
    subject: The subject of the email message.
    message_text: The text of the email message.

    Returns:
    An object containing a base64url encoded email object.
    """
    print(sender + ', ' + to + ', ' + subject + ', ' + message_text)
    message = MIMEText(message_text)
    message['to'] = to
    message['from'] = sender
    message['subject'] = subject
    message['cc'] = cc
    pprint(message)
    return {'raw': base64.urlsafe_b64encode(message.as_string())}

def send_message(service, user_id, message_in):
    """Send an email message.

    Args:
    service: Authorized Gmail API service instance.
    user_id: User's email address. The special value "me"
    can be used to indicate the authenticated user.
    message: Message to be sent.

    Returns:
    Sent Message.
    """
    pprint(message_in)
    try:
        message = (service.users().messages().send(userId=user_id, body=message_in).execute())
        pprint(message)
        print ('Message Id: %s' % message['id'])
        return message
    except errors.HttpError, error:
        print ('An error occurred: %s' % error)

def main(cli):
    """Shows basic usage of the Gmail API.

    Creates a Gmail API service object and outputs a list of label names
    of the user's Gmail account.
    """


    credentials = get_credentials()
    http = credentials.authorize(httplib2.Http())
    service = discovery.build('gmail', 'v1', http=http)

    email_msg = create_message(cli.addr_from, cli.addr_to, cli.addr_cc, cli.subject, cli.message)
    msg_out = service.users().messages().send(userId = 'me', body = email_msg).execute()
    pprint(msg_out)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument('-m', '--message',   help = 'The message to send in the email', default='<MESSAGE = unfinished>')
    parser.add_argument('-t', '--addr_to',   help = 'the list of comma separated emails to send', default='cbsd.tools@gmail.com')
    parser.add_argument('-s', '--subject',   help = 'the email subject', default='<SUBJECT = undefined>')
    parser.add_argument('-c', '--addr_cc',   help = 'email CC\'s', default='')
    parser.add_argument('-f', '--addr_from', help = 'Email address to send from', default='cbsd.tools@gmail.com')
    cli = parser.parse_args()
    pprint(dir(cli))

    main(cli)

Tried as I might, with this code, and variations on it, I could not get html formatted code, nor could I get simple escape characters to create carriage returns where they needed to be.


Here's what didn't work

Trying the following didn't work either:

  1. modifying line 69 to add additional message dictionary parameters... ie.
    • {'raw': base64.urlsafe_b64encode(message.as_string()), 'payload': {'mimeType': 'text/html'}}
    • As documented here in the GMail API Docs
    • enter image description here
  2. Adding a variety of escaped backslashes into the message text:
    • \n... ie: \\n nor \\\n and just rendered as those exact characters
    • Adding <br> </br> <br/> did not add new lines and just rendered as those exact characters
    • Adding \r did not add new lines and just rendered as that exact character

Reasons this is not a duplicate question

Community
  • 1
  • 1
Andrew
  • 1,423
  • 1
  • 17
  • 26

3 Answers3

58

After doing a lot of digging around, I started looking in to the python side of the message handling, and noticed that a python object is actually constructing the message to be sent for base64 encoding into the gmail-api message object constructor.

See line 63 from above: message = MIMEText(message_text)

The one trick that finally worked for me, after all the attempts to modify the header values and payload dict (which is a member of the message object), was to set (line 63):

  • message = MIMEText(message_text, 'html') <-- add the 'html' as the second parameter of the MIMEText object constructor

The default code supplied by Google for their gmail API only tells you how to send plain text emails, but they hide how they're doing that. ala... message = MIMEText(message_text)

I had to look up the python class email.mime.text.MIMEText object. That's where you'll see this definition of the constructor for the MIMEText object:

  • class email.mime.text.MIMEText(_text[, _subtype[, _charset]]) We want to explicitly pass it a value to the _subtype. In this case, we want to pass: 'html' as the _subtype.

Now, you won't have anymore unexpected word wrapping applied to your messages by Google, or the Python mime.text.MIMEText object


The Fixed Code

def create_message(sender, to, cc, subject, message_text):
    """Create a message for an email.

    Args:
    sender: Email address of the sender.
    to: Email address of the receiver.
    subject: The subject of the email message.
    message_text: The text of the email message.

    Returns:
    An object containing a base64url encoded email object.
    """
    print(sender + ', ' + to + ', ' + subject + ', ' + message_text)
    message = MIMEText(message_text,'html')
    message['to'] = to
    message['from'] = sender
    message['subject'] = subject
    message['cc'] = cc
    pprint(message)
    return {'raw': base64.urlsafe_b64encode(message.as_string())}
toblerone_country
  • 577
  • 14
  • 26
Andrew
  • 1,423
  • 1
  • 17
  • 26
8

Try this:

    def CreateMessage(emailSubject, emailTo, emailFrom, message_body, emailCc, html_content=None):
        try:
            message = MIMEMultipart('alternative')
            message['to'] = emailTo
            message['from'] = emailFrom
            message['subject'] = emailSubject
            message['Cc'] = emailCc
            body_mime = MIMEText(message_body, 'plain')
            message.attach(body_mime)
            if html_content:
                html_mime = MIMEText(html_content, 'html')
                message.attach(html_mime)
            return {
                'raw': base64.urlsafe_b64encode(
                    bytes(
                        message.as_string(),
                        "utf-8")).decode("utf-8")}
        except Exception as e:
            print('Error in CreateMessage()', e)
            return '400'
Januka samaranyake
  • 2,385
  • 1
  • 28
  • 50
  • The exception handling is a good call, but overall I'm not interested in multipart messaging for my current application. I just need html formatting. – Andrew Dec 31 '16 at 09:45
  • I just gave a function that suitable for both :) – Januka samaranyake Dec 31 '16 at 09:47
  • 2
    Right, which would be awesome if that were required. Toward the end of the question i specifically state that I'm not interested in multipart mime types, and this question related to pure html formatting. It's a good answer for a more robust, complicated, API approach, which is over-engineering for this project and question. I do like it as a general answer for a different question, especially the try catch bit. – Andrew Dec 31 '16 at 09:52
  • 1
    Great answer. - If SO wasn't here to benefit a community of users with a broad range of requirements - then what would be the point of it ? It's a great answer even for *this* question. – hmedia1 Jul 16 '18 at 03:02
  • 1
    @ hmedia1, The question itself already gives a link that solves this with multipart messages - so I've already acknowledged that it is a usable solution and given a link to how to solve it that way - as well as stating that for this solution I'm not interested in it. I don't think my critique is unfair. – Andrew Sep 05 '18 at 00:16
  • From reading this, https://www.gmass.co/blog/gmail-api-html-plain-text-messages/, it looks like even if you only specify HTML, the Gmail API/Servers(?) will convert your HTML to plain text and create a multi-part message for you. Jump to **Sending an email with just an HTML part and NO plain text part**. So, you might want to take control of the plain text and make sure it's what you want, and not what Google software derives for you. – Zach Young Apr 10 '22 at 20:44
5

The accepted answer works, but in my journey down this rabbit hole, I found the right place to put the payload from the original question, so here's a full example. I'm using a service account with domain-wide delegation:

import base64 
from googleapiclient.discovery import build
from google.oauth2 import service_account
from email.message import EmailMessage

SCOPES = ['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/gmail.send']
CREDS = service_account.Credentials.from_service_account_file(
        serviceAcct, scopes=SCOPES, subject=senderEmail)

with build('gmail', 'v1', credentials=CREDS) as service:
    msg = EmailMessage()
    content="Message body in <b>html</b> format!"

    msg['To'] = recipientEmail
    msg['From'] = senderEmail
    msg['Subject'] = 'Gmail API test'
    # Use this for plain text
    # msg.set_content(content)
    # Otherwise, use this for html
    msg.add_header('Content-Type','text/html')
    msg.set_payload(content)

    encodedMsg = base64.urlsafe_b64encode(msg.as_bytes()).decode()

    try:
        sendMsg = service.users().messages().send(
            userId=senderEmail,
            body={ 'raw': encodedMsg }
        ).execute()
        print('Msg id:', sendMsg['id'])
    except Exception as e:
        print('Error:', e)
alaferg
  • 233
  • 2
  • 10