2022.1

Table Of Contents
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All standard abbreviations can be found in Emmet's documentation: Abbreviations.
To learn more about Emmet, please see their website: Emmet.io and the Emmet.io
documentation: http://docs.emmet.io/.
Preferences
To change the way Emmet works in the Designer, select Window > Preferences, and in the
Preferences dialog, select Emmet; see "Emmet preferences" on page903.
Using CSS files with HTML email
Email clients do not read CSS files and some even remove a <style> tag when it is present in
the email's header. Nevertheless, CSS files can be used with the Email context in the
Designer.
When generating output from the Email context, all CSS rules that apply to the content of the
email can be processed and added either to the header of the email or to inline style properties
as if local formatting was applied, depending on the Email section properties. See "Email
section properties" on page1075.
Using images in email campaigns: tips
Host images on a public server
In the Designer you can add images as resource to the template document. When used in
email messages these images are automatically embedded on sending the email. These
embedded images appear instantly when viewing the message in your email client.
There is, however, a downside to this method: embedded images can't be used to track email
open rates. Email services like mandrillapp.com embed a tiny tracer image at the bottom of your
message. Each time a recipient opens the email the tracer image (aka beacon image) is
downloaded and yet another 'open' is registered. On mobile devices this happens when the
user clicks the Display Images button.
So, when tracking open rates in your email campaigns, store your images on a publicly-
accessible server (preferably your own server- you could set up a process in Workflow to serve
images and track open rates) or a reputable image hosting service, like photobucket.com. Don't
forget to set the Alternate Text for your images on the Attributes pane.
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