29

I have designed an Email Template from Razor Syntax. When I send this template as Email using C# code and SMTP protocol, I get bare Razor and HTML markups as Email Body. Am I wrong in this approach? Are Razor Pages allowed as Email Template?

Here is my Page

@inherits ViewPage
@{
Layout = "_Layout";
ViewBag.Title = "";
}
<div class="container w-420 p-15 bg-white mt-40">
<div style="border-top:3px solid #22BCE5">&nbsp;</div>
<span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt">
    Hello <b>{UserName}</b>,<br /><br />
    Thanks for Registering to XYZ Portal<br /><br />
    <a style="color:#22BCE5" href="{Url}">Click to Confirm Email</a><br />

    <br /><br />
    Thanks<br />
    Admin (XYZ)
</span>

Update..

 using (StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(HttpContext.Current.Server.MapPath("~/ContentPages/EmailConfTemplate.cshtml")))
  {
     body = reader.ReadToEnd();
     //Replace UserName and Other variables available in body Stream
     body = body.Replace("{UserName}", FirstName);

  }

Later On I am replacing the SMTP Code as ..

  MailMessage message = new MailMessage(
    ApplicationWideData.fromEmailId, // From field
    ToEmailId, // Recipient field
    "Click On HyperLink To Verify Email Id", // Subject of the email message
    body
   );
8
  • Something needs to process the razor, and spit out HTML. How are you using the templates in your code that prepares the email?
    – SWeko
    Oct 14, 2015 at 11:44
  • @SWeko I am creating Email body using Razor Syntax.For Sending i am using SMTP in c#
    – Lara
    Oct 14, 2015 at 11:46
  • Can you show the code?
    – SWeko
    Oct 14, 2015 at 11:47
  • @SWeko You want my C# code?
    – Lara
    Oct 14, 2015 at 11:47
  • 1
    @SWeko I updated my Post ..Please have a look.Also i tried to replace the .cshtml page with HTML but again i am getting the same HTML Markup Synatx as Mail Body..I am refering codeproject.com/Articles/874218/… link
    – Lara
    Oct 14, 2015 at 11:53

5 Answers 5

32

You do not need any special libraries to render a Razor view to a string in an ASP.NET MVC application.

Here is how you do it in MVC Core 3

public static class ViewToStringRenderer
{
    public static async Task<string> RenderViewToStringAsync<TModel>(IServiceProvider requestServices, string viewName, TModel model)
    {
        var viewEngine = requestServices.GetRequiredService(typeof(IRazorViewEngine)) as IRazorViewEngine;
        ViewEngineResult viewEngineResult = viewEngine.GetView(null, viewName, false);
        if (viewEngineResult.View == null)
        {
            throw new Exception("Could not find the View file. Searched locations:\r\n" + string.Join("\r\n", viewEngineResult.SearchedLocations));
        }
        else
        {
            IView view = viewEngineResult.View;
            var httpContextAccessor = (IHttpContextAccessor)requestServices.GetRequiredService(typeof(IHttpContextAccessor));
            var actionContext = new ActionContext(httpContextAccessor.HttpContext, new RouteData(), new ActionDescriptor());
            var tempDataProvider = requestServices.GetRequiredService(typeof(ITempDataProvider)) as ITempDataProvider;

            using var outputStringWriter = new StringWriter();
            var viewContext = new ViewContext(
                actionContext,
                view,
                new ViewDataDictionary<TModel>(new EmptyModelMetadataProvider(), new ModelStateDictionary()) { Model = model },
                new TempDataDictionary(actionContext.HttpContext, tempDataProvider),
                outputStringWriter,
                new HtmlHelperOptions());

            await view.RenderAsync(viewContext);

            return outputStringWriter.ToString();
        }
    }
}

In the controller

string str = await ViewToStringRenderer.RenderViewToStringAsync(HttpContext.RequestServices, $"~/Views/Emails/MyEmailTemplate.cshtml", new MyEmailModel { Prop1 = "Hello", Prop2 = 23 });

In ConfigureServices() in Startup.cs

services.AddSingleton<IHttpContextAccessor, HttpContextAccessor>();

Here is how you do it in MVC 5

public static class ViewToStringRenderer
{
    public static string RenderViewToString<TModel>(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, TModel model)
    {
        ViewEngineResult viewEngineResult = ViewEngines.Engines.FindView(controllerContext, viewName, null);
        if (viewEngineResult.View == null)
        {
            throw new Exception("Could not find the View file. Searched locations:\r\n" + viewEngineResult.SearchedLocations);
        }
        else
        {
            IView view = viewEngineResult.View;

            using (var stringWriter = new StringWriter())
            {
                var viewContext = new ViewContext(controllerContext, view, new ViewDataDictionary<TModel>(model), new TempDataDictionary(), stringWriter);
                view.Render(viewContext, stringWriter);

                return stringWriter.ToString();
            }
        }
    }
}

Then, from the controller

ViewToStringRenderer.RenderViewToString(this.ControllerContext, "~/Views/Emails/MyEmailTemplate.cshtml", model);

After you have the email content, it is easy to send the email using MailMessage and SmtpClient.

5
  • 3
    THIS is such the right anwser, I spent the whole day working on the issue. This works fast and wihtout a bunch of dependancies.
    – Paul Duer
    Feb 20, 2020 at 21:54
  • 1
    Perfect answer, this must be the accepted answer! Dec 3, 2020 at 22:02
  • 1
    This is amazing! We don't need that RazorEngine library now..
    – SimpleGuy
    Jan 22, 2021 at 0:19
  • 7
    Any idea about how to get ControllerContext, if the view is to be rendered without controller?
    – SimpleGuy
    Jan 22, 2021 at 0:50
  • 2
    This. Absolutely this. I've tried using other libraries that were a pain to get working, then fell over when deployed to the server. I've implemented the .Net Core solution in my .Net 5 project in conjunction with Microsoft.Net.Mail.SmtpClient and it works like a charm. Bassem - just a suggestion: include your using statements with your code so that we can see which Namespaces you're using. Cheers!
    – Pete
    Dec 6, 2021 at 11:41
27

Email messages only understand two formats: plain text and HTML. Since Razor is neither, it will need to be processed by some engine, so that it gives you back the generated HTML.

That's exactly what happens when you use Razor in ASP.NET MVC, behind the scenes. The Razor file is compiled into a internal C# class, that gets executed, and the result of the execution is the string content of the HTML, that gets sent to the client.

Your problem is that you want and need that processing to run, only to get the HTML back as a string, instead of being sent to the browser. After that you can do whatever you want with the HTML string, including sending it as an e-mail.

There are several packages that include this power, and I've used Westwind.RazorHosting successfully, but you can also use RazorEngine with similar results. I would prefer RazorHosting for standalone non-web applications, and RazorEngine for web applications

Here is a (sanitized) version of some of my code - I'm using Westwind.RazorHosting to send razor-formatted emails from a windows service, using a strongly typed view.

RazorFolderHostContainer host = = new RazorFolderHostContainer();
host.ReferencedAssemblies.Add("NotificationsManagement.dll");
host.TemplatePath = templatePath;
host.Start();
string output = host.RenderTemplate(template.Filename, model);

MailMessage mm = new MailMessage { Subject = subject, IsBodyHtml = true };
mm.Body = output;
mm.To.Add(email);

var smtpClient = new SmtpClient();
await smtpClient.SendMailAsync(mm);
2
  • 1
    It's quite easy to keep the .cshtml - Razor is a great templating engine - especially if you have different models, and templates in different languages, etc... Not to mention that you can always grab the file, set it as a real view, and see it in a browser.
    – SWeko
    Oct 14, 2015 at 12:05
  • 9
    is there a asp.net core 2 alternative?
    – Liero
    Mar 8, 2018 at 13:36
5

Have you took a look at MVC Mailer?

It's a free package available from GitHub (https://github.com/smsohan/MvcMailer)

There is a step by step guide for it too https://github.com/smsohan/MvcMailer/wiki/MvcMailer-Step-by-Step-Guide

It's also on Nuget too. https://www.nuget.org/packages/MvcMailer

Essentially it will parse your razor view into html.

1

Check out a razor processor like RazorEngine (https://razorengine.codeplex.com/) which is available on NuGet. It processes razor to create an output, which is what you'd then use as the body of your email.

1

The Mailzory project is a valuable and convenient choice for sending emails which have Razor templates.

// template path
var viewPath = Path.Combine("Views/Emails", "hello.cshtml");
// read the content of template and pass it to the Email constructor
var template = File.ReadAllText(viewPath);

var email = new Email(template);

// set ViewBag properties
email.ViewBag.Name = "Johnny";
email.ViewBag.Content = "Mailzory Is Funny";

// send email
var task = email.SendAsync("[email protected]", "subject");
task.Wait()

this project is hosted at Github. Also there is a nuget package available for Mailzory.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.