Why to Convert EML to EPUB?
EML (Electronic Mail) is a popular file format used for storing emails. It is widely used by many email clients such as Microsoft Outlook, Mozilla Thunderbird, etc. EPUB (Electronic Publication) is an open standard format for e-books and digital publications. It is supported by many e-book readers such as Apple iBooks, Kobo, Barnes & Noble Nook, etc. Converting EML to EPUB allows users to read emails in the form of e-books. This makes it easier to read emails on various devices and platforms.
How Aspose.Total Helps for EML to EPUB Conversion?
Aspose.Total for Python via .NET is a full package of various APIs dealing different formats including Email, Images and Microsoft Word formats. It includes Aspose.Words for Python via .NET and Aspose.Email for Python via .NET APIs that make it easy to convert EML to EPUB using Python. It is a two step process, firstly load Email and render it into HTML via Aspose.Email for Python via .NET. Secondly load the converted HTML using Aspose.Words for Python via .NET and save it into respective Word EPUB format. This makes it easy for Python developers to add a EML to EPUB conversion feature within their application.
How to Convert EML to EPUB in Python
- Open the source EML file using MailMessage.load class
- Call the
save
method while specifying output HTML file path and relevant HTML Save options as parameter. So your EML file is converted to HTML at the specified path - Now Load the saved HTML file using Document
- Call the save method with relevant file path. So finally the EML is converted
Conversion Requirements
- For EML to EPUB conversion, Python 3.5 or later is required
- Reference APIs within the project directly from PyPI ( Aspose.Words and Aspose.Email )
- Or use the following pip command
pip install aspose.words
andpip install Aspose.Email-for-Python-via-NET
- Moreover, Microsoft Windows or Linux based OS (see more for Words and Email ) and for Linux check additional requirements for gcc and libpython and follow step by step instructions INSTALL