Oops, restoring file on testing

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leandrotoledo 2015-09-04 18:11:15 -03:00
parent 82f1d18f4b
commit 121e365348

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# There could be some unused imports
from inspect import getmembers, ismethod
import threading
import logging
import telegram
import time
from telegram import CommandHandlerWithHelp, CommandHandler
class ExampleCommandHandler(CommandHandlerWithHelp):
"""This is an example how to use a CommandHandlerWithHelp or just a CommandHandler.
If You want to use a CommandHandler it is very easy.
create a class which inherits a CommandHandler.
create a method in this class which start with 'command_' and takes 1 argument: 'update' (which comes directly from
getUpdate()).
If you inherit CommandHandlerWithHelp it also creates a nice /help for you.
"""
def __init__(self, bot): # only necessary for a WithHelp
super(ExampleCommandHandler, self).__init__(bot)
self._help_title = 'Welcome this is a help file!' # optional
self._help_before_list = """
Yeah here I explain some things about this bot.
and of course I can do this in Multiple lines.
""" # default is empty
self._help_list_title = ' These are the available commands:' # optional
self._help_after_list = ' These are some footnotes' # default is empty
self.is_reply = True # default is True
# only necessary if you want to override to default
def _command_not_found(self, update):
"""Inform the telegram user that the command was not found."""
chat_id = update.message.chat.id
reply_to = update.message.message_id
message = "Sorry, I don't know how to do {command}.".format(command=update.message.text.split(' ')[0])
self.bot.sendMessage(chat_id, message, reply_to_message_id=reply_to)
# creates /test command. This code gets called when a telegram user enters /test
def command_test(self, update):
""" Test if the server is online. """
chat_id = update.message.chat.id
reply_to = update.message.message_id
message = 'Yeah, the server is online!'
self.bot.sendMessage(chat_id, message, reply_to_message_id=reply_to)
# creates /parrot command
def command_parrot(self, update):
""" Says back what you say after the command"""
chat_id = update.message.chat.id
reply_to = update.message.message_id
send = update.message.text.split(' ')
message = update.message.text[len(send[0]):]
if len(send) == 1:
message = '...'
self.bot.sendMessage(chat_id, message, reply_to_message_id=reply_to)
# creates /p command
def command_p(self, update):
"""Does the same as parrot."""
return self.command_parrot(update)
# this doesn't create a command.
def another_test(self, update):
""" This won't be called by the CommandHandler.
This is an example of a function that isn't a command in telegram.
Because it didn't start with 'command_'.
"""
chat_id = update.message.chat.id
reply_to = update.message.message_id
message = 'Yeah, this is another test'
self.bot.sendMessage(chat_id, message, reply_to_message_id=reply_to)
class Exampe2CommandHandler(CommandHandler):
"""
This is an example of a small working CommandHandler with only one command.
"""
def command_test(self, update):
""" Test if the server is online. """
chat_id = update.message.chat.id
reply_to = update.message.message_id
message = 'Yeah, the server is online!'
self.bot.sendMessage(chat_id, message, reply_to_message_id=reply_to)
if __name__ == '__main__':
import telegram
token = '' # use your own token here
Bot = telegram.Bot(token=token)
test_command_handler = ExampleCommandHandler(Bot)
test_command_handler.run()