💌 A beautiful, fast and fully open source mail client for Mac, Windows and Linux.
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Juan Tejada b14e4f6aa2 fix(markdown): Fix textarea bug (use our fork of simplemde)
- Textarea bug prevented us from typing in the markdown editor, almost
consistently. Seems to be a chrome bug
- Stop using textarea and use contenteditable instead via codemirror's
inputStyle option. Had to use our fork of simplemde to be able to pass that option
- Disable spellchecker also
2016-09-01 19:43:10 -07:00
apm
build
docs
dot-nylas fix(packages): Make sure we can migrate and correctly disable new packages 2016-09-01 14:53:31 -07:00
examples
internal_packages fix(markdown): Fix textarea bug (use our fork of simplemde) 2016-09-01 19:43:10 -07:00
keymaps
menus
script
spec
spec_integration
src fix(packages): Make sure we can migrate and correctly disable new packages 2016-09-01 14:53:31 -07:00
static fix(size): Losslessly compress images via ImageOptim 2016-09-01 11:32:52 -07:00
.eslintrc
.gitignore fix(build): Trigger travis rebuild 2016-04-24 18:57:55 -05:00
.gitmodules
.travis.yml
appveyor.yml
CHANGELOG.md
CONFIGURATION.md
CONTRIBUTING.md
ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
keymap.json
LICENSE.md
N1.sh
package.json
README.md

N1 Logo

N1 Screenshot

N1 is an open-source mail client built on the modern web with Electron, React, and Flux. It is designed to be extensible, so it's easy to create new experiences and workflows around email. N1 is built on the Nylas Sync Engine, which is also open-source free software.

Build Status Slack Invite Button ![GitHub issues On Deck](https://badge.waffle.io/nylas/N1.png?label=on deck&title=On Deck)

Want help build the future of email? Nylas is hiring!

Download N1

You can download compiled versions of N1 for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux (.deb) from https://nylas.com/N1. You can also build and run N1 on Fedora. On Arch Linux, you can install n1 or n1-git from the aur.

Build A Plugin

Plugins lie at the heart of N1 and give it its powerful features. Building your own plugins allows you to integrate the app with other tools, experiment with new workflows, and more. Follow the Getting Started guide to write your first plugin in five minutes. To create your own theme, go to our Theme Starter guide.

If you would like to run the N1 source and contribute, check out our contributing guide.

Themes

The Nylas N1 user interface is styled using CSS, which means it's easy to modify and extend. N1 comes stock with a few beautiful themes, and there are many more which have been built by community developers

Bundled Themes

Community Themes

To install community themes:

  1. Download and unzip the repo
  2. In Nylas N1, select Developer > Install a Package Manually...
  3. Navigate to where you downloaded the theme and select the root folder. The theme is copied into the ~/.nylas folder for your convinence
  4. Select Change Theme... from the top level menu, and you'll see the newly installed theme. That's it!

Want to dive in more? Try creating your own theme!

Plugin List

We're working on building a plugin index that makes it super easy to add them to N1. For now, check out the list below! (Feel free to submit a PR if you build a plugin and want it featured here.)

Bundled Plugins

Great starting points for creating your own plugins!

Community Plugins

When you install packages, they're moved to ~/.nylas/packages, and N1 runs apm install on the command line to fetch dependencies listed in the package's package.json

Configuration

You can configure N1 in a few ways—for instance, pointing it to your self-hosted instance of the sync engine or changing the interface zoom level. Learn more about how.

Feature Requests / Plugin Ideas

Have an idea for a package or a feature you'd love to see in N1? Check out our public Trello board to contribute your thoughts and vote on existing ideas.