Use Javascript to create an HTML email in Microsoft Outlook

MSG file format is documented, but it is certainly not fun... Why not create an EML (MIME) file?

The suggestion is to use the EML (MIME) format. According to the OP, they considered the MSG file format (#4), but was discouraged due to complexity or lack of JS libraries that process that format. If MSG file was considered, MIME is a much better choice - it is text based, so no special libraries are required to create it. Outlook will be able to open it just as easily as an MSG file.

To make sure it is treated as an unsent message by Outlook, set the X-Unsent MIME header to 1.


The simplest EML file would look like the following:

To: Joe The User <[email protected]>
Subject: Test EML message
X-Unsent: 1
Content-Type: text/html

<html>
<body>
Test message with <b>bold</b> text.
</body>
</html>

I had encoding problem when creating an .eml file with non-english characters and then opening it in Outlook. The problem was that I put the "charset=" to the wrong place and did not put the quotes (") around the encoding. The solution:

function createShiftReportEmail() {
    const title = "Shift Összefoglaló";
    const body = "ÁÉŐÚŰÓÜÖÍűáéúőóöí";

    const emlContent = new Blob([`data:message/rfc822 eml,\nSubject: ${title}\nX-Unsent: 1\nContent-Type: text/plain;charset="utf-8"\n\n${body}`]);

    if (!document.querySelector('#downloadEmail')) {
        document.body.insertAdjacentHTML('beforeend', '<a id="downloadEmail" download="ShiftReport.eml" style="display: none">Download</a>');
    }
    const downloadBtn = document.querySelector('#downloadEmail');
    downloadBtn.href = URL.createObjectURL(emlContent);
    downloadBtn.click();
}

Edit: Turns out quotes (") are not even necessary. Only the placement was wrong for me.


Nobody seems to have answered the attachment question, so here's my solution: create the EML as a multipart/mixed message.

Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=--boundary_text_string

With this, you can have multiple parts in your email. Multiple parts let you add attachments, like this.

Content-Type: application/octet-stream; name=demo.pdf
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Disposition: attachment

Start with your email headers, then add your boundary, then the part contents (newline locations are very important, clients won't parse your file correctly otherwise). You can add multiple parts. Below is an example. Note that the last boundary is different from the others (2 dashes at the end).

To: Demo-Recipient <[email protected]>
Subject: EML with attachments
X-Unsent: 1
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=--boundary_text_string

----boundary_text_string
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8

<html>
<body>
<p>Example</p>
</body>
</html>

----boundary_text_string
Content-Type: application/octet-stream; name=demo.txt
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Disposition: attachment
ZXhhbXBsZQ==

----boundary_text_string
Content-Type: application/octet-stream; name=demo.log
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Disposition: attachment
ZXhhbXBsZQ==

----boundary_text_string--

This gives you a eml file with two attachments. See RFC 1371 if you want to know more specifics on how this works.


Using the idea of plain text eml files, I came up with this: http://jsfiddle.net/CalvT/un3hapej/

This is an edit of something I found - to create a .txt file then download it. As .eml files are practically .txt files, I figured this would work. And it does. I've left the textarea with the sample email in so you can easily test. When you click on create file, it then gives you a download link to download your .eml file. The only hurdle I can see is making the browser open the .eml file after it has been downloaded.

EDIT: And thinking about it, as you have access to the client machines, you could set the browser to always open files of that type. For instance in Chrome, you can click on the arrow beside the download and select always open files of this type.

Here's the code

HTML:

(function () {
var textFile = null,
  makeTextFile = function (text) {
    var data = new Blob([text], {type: 'text/plain'});

    if (textFile !== null) {
      window.URL.revokeObjectURL(textFile);
    }

    textFile = window.URL.createObjectURL(data);

    return textFile;
  };


  var create = document.getElementById('create'),
    textbox = document.getElementById('textbox');

  create.addEventListener('click', function () {
    var link = document.getElementById('downloadlink');
    link.href = makeTextFile(textbox.value);
    link.style.display = 'block';
  }, false);
})();
<textarea id="textbox" style="width: 300px; height: 200px;">
To: User <[email protected]>
Subject: Subject
X-Unsent: 1
Content-Type: text/html

<html>
<body>
Test message
</body>
</html>
  
</textarea>

<button id="create">Create file</button>
  
<a download="message.eml" id="downloadlink" style="display: none">Download</a>