My input file is a CSV file and by running some python script which consists of the python Tabulate module, I have created a table that looks like this below:-
| Attenuation | Avg Ping RTT in ms | TCP UP | |---------------:|---------------------:|---------:| | 60 | 2.31 | 106.143 | | 70 | 2.315 | 103.624 |
I would like to send the this table in the email body and not as an attachment using python.
I have created a sendMail function and will be expecting to send the table in the mail_body.
sendMail([to_addr], from_addr, mail_subject, mail_body, [file_name])
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Answer
This code sends the message in the typical plain text plus HTML multipart/alternative format. If your correspondent reads this in an HTML-aware mail reader, he’ll see the HTML table. If he reads it in a plain-text reader, he’ll see the plain-text version.
In either case, he will see the data included in the body of the message, and not as an attachment.
import csv from tabulate import tabulate from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart from email.mime.text import MIMEText import smtplib me = 'xxx@gmail.com' password = 'yyyzzz!!2' server = 'smtp.gmail.com:587' you = 'qqq@gmail.com' text = """ Hello, Friend. Here is your data: {table} Regards, Me""" html = """ <html><body><p>Hello, Friend.</p> <p>Here is your data:</p> {table} <p>Regards,</p> <p>Me</p> </body></html> """ with open('input.csv') as input_file: reader = csv.reader(input_file) data = list(reader) text = text.format(table=tabulate(data, headers="firstrow", tablefmt="grid")) html = html.format(table=tabulate(data, headers="firstrow", tablefmt="html")) message = MIMEMultipart( "alternative", None, [MIMEText(text), MIMEText(html,'html')]) message['Subject'] = "Your data" message['From'] = me message['To'] = you server = smtplib.SMTP(server) server.ehlo() server.starttls() server.login(me, password) server.sendmail(me, you, message.as_string()) server.quit()