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Laravel – Sending Email

Laravel – Sending Email

Laravel uses free feature-rich library SwiftMailer to send emails. Using the library function, we can easily send emails without too many hassles. The e-mail templates are loaded in the same way as views, which means you can use the Blade syntax and inject data into your templates.
The following table shows the syntax and attributes of send function −
Syntaxvoid send(string|array $view, array $data, Closure|string $callback)
Parameters
  • $view(string|array) – name of the view that contains email message
  • $data(array) – array of data to pass to view
  • $callback – a Closure callback which receives a message instance, allowing you to customize the recipients, subject, and other aspects of the mail message
Returnsnothing
DescriptionSends email.
In the third argument, the $callback closure received message instance and with that instance we can also call the following functions and alter the message as shown below.
  • $message → subject(‘Welcome to the Tutorials Point’);
  • $message → from(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
  • $message → to(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
Some of the less common methods include −
  • $message → sender(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
  • $message → returnPath(’email [at] example [dot] com’);
  • $message → cc(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
  • $message → bcc(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
  • $message → replyTo(’email [at] example [dot] com’, ‘Mr. Example’);
  • $message → priority(2);
To attach or embed files, you can use the following methods −
  • $message → attach(‘path/to/attachment.txt’);
  • $message → embed(‘path/to/attachment.jpg’);
Mail can be sent as HTML or text. You can indicate the type of mail that you want to send in the first argument by passing an array as shown below. The default type is HTML. If you want to send plain text mail then use the following syntax.

Syntax

In this syntax, the first argument takes an array. Use text as the key name of the view as value of the key.

Example

Step 1 − We will now send an email from Gmail account and for that you need to configure your Gmail account in Laravel environment file – .env file. Enable 2-step verification in your Gmail account and create an application specific password followed by changing the .env parameters as shown below.

.env

Step 2 − After changing the .env file execute the below two commands to clear the cache and restart the Laravel server.
Step 3 − Create a controller called MailController by executing the following command.
Step 4 − After successful execution, you will receive the following output −
Step 5 − Copy the following code in
app/Http/Controllers/MailController.php file.
app/Http/Controllers/MailController.php
Step 6 − Copy the following code in resources/views/mail.blade.php file.
resources/views/mail.blade.php
Step 7 − Add the following lines in app/Http/routes.php.
app/Http/routes.php
Step 8 − Visit the following URL to test basic email.
Step 9 − The output screen will look something like this. Check your inbox to see the basic email output.
Basic Email Sent
Step 10 − Visit the following URL to test the HTML email.
Step 11 − The output screen will look something like this. Check your inbox to see the html email output.
HTML Email
Step 12 − Visit the following URL to test the HTML email with attachment.
tep 13 − You can see the following output
Email Sent
Note − In the MailController.php file the email address in the from method should be the email address from which you can send email address. Generally, it should be the email address configured on your server.

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