could anyone kindly guide me which of the css rules are moderately acceptable when designing for html mails?
i was told not all css is supported
thanks! yes, i would like to know aswell, i was trying earlier this eveningcould anyone kindly guide me which of the css rules are moderately acceptable when designing for html mails?
i was told not all css is supported
thanks!
It's a disaster area. Basically, you pretty much have to just go ahead and presentation style="" attributes on every single element. There's no way to include a <head> tag in an email, and even if you did, most webmails would strip it out.
(There was a treatise on this a while back, in ALA perhaps?)Have a look at this article: Create compatible HTML Email (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.anandgraves.com/redirect/htmlemail.html">http://www.anandgraves.com/redirect/htmlemail.html</a><!-- m -->). Here you can find examples on which CSS definitions you can use.
i was told not all css is supported
thanks! yes, i would like to know aswell, i was trying earlier this eveningcould anyone kindly guide me which of the css rules are moderately acceptable when designing for html mails?
i was told not all css is supported
thanks!
It's a disaster area. Basically, you pretty much have to just go ahead and presentation style="" attributes on every single element. There's no way to include a <head> tag in an email, and even if you did, most webmails would strip it out.
(There was a treatise on this a while back, in ALA perhaps?)Have a look at this article: Create compatible HTML Email (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.anandgraves.com/redirect/htmlemail.html">http://www.anandgraves.com/redirect/htmlemail.html</a><!-- m -->). Here you can find examples on which CSS definitions you can use.