#!/usr/bin/env python # # A library that provides a Python interface to the Telegram Bot API # Copyright (C) 2015-2020 # Leandro Toledo de Souza # # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU Lesser Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU Lesser Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser Public License # along with this program. If not, see [http://www.gnu.org/licenses/]. """This module contains helper functions.""" import datetime as dtm # dtm = "DateTime Module" import time from collections import defaultdict from numbers import Number try: import ujson as json except ImportError: import json from html import escape import re import signal # From https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2549939/get-signal-names-from-numbers-in-python _signames = {v: k for k, v in reversed(sorted(vars(signal).items())) if k.startswith('SIG') and not k.startswith('SIG_')} def get_signal_name(signum): """Returns the signal name of the given signal number.""" return _signames[signum] def escape_markdown(text, version=1, entity_type=None): """ Helper function to escape telegram markup symbols. Args: text (:obj:`str`): The text. version (:obj:`int` | :obj:`str`): Use to specify the version of telegrams Markdown. Either ``1`` or ``2``. Defaults to ``1``. entity_type (:obj:`str`, optional): For the entity types ``PRE``, ``CODE`` and the link part of ``TEXT_LINKS``, only certain characters need to be escaped in ``MarkdownV2``. See the official API documentation for details. Only valid in combination with ``version=2``, will be ignored else. """ if int(version) == 1: escape_chars = '\*_`\[' elif int(version) == 2: if entity_type == 'pre' or entity_type == 'code': escape_chars = '`\\\\' elif entity_type == 'text_link': escape_chars = ')\\\\' else: escape_chars = '_*\[\]()~`>\#\+\-=|{}\.!' else: raise ValueError('Markdown version musst be either 1 or 2!') return re.sub(r'([%s])' % escape_chars, r'\\\1', text) # -------- date/time related helpers -------- # TODO: add generic specification of UTC for naive datetimes to docs def _datetime_to_float_timestamp(dt_obj): """Converts a datetime object to a float timestamp (with sub-second precision). If the datetime object is timezone-naive, it is assumed to be in UTC.""" if dt_obj.tzinfo is None: dt_obj = dt_obj.replace(tzinfo=dtm.timezone.utc) return dt_obj.timestamp() def to_float_timestamp(t, reference_timestamp=None): """ Converts a given time object to a float POSIX timestamp. Used to convert different time specifications to a common format. The time object can be relative (i.e. indicate a time increment, or a time of day) or absolute. Any objects from the :class:`datetime` module that are timezone-naive will be assumed to be in UTC. ``None`` s are left alone (i.e. ``to_float_timestamp(None)`` is ``None``). Args: t (int | float | datetime.timedelta | datetime.datetime | datetime.time): Time value to convert. The semantics of this parameter will depend on its type: * :obj:`int` or :obj:`float` will be interpreted as "seconds from ``reference_t``" * :obj:`datetime.timedelta` will be interpreted as "time increment from ``reference_t``" * :obj:`datetime.datetime` will be interpreted as an absolute date/time value * :obj:`datetime.time` will be interpreted as a specific time of day reference_timestamp (float, optional): POSIX timestamp that indicates the absolute time from which relative calculations are to be performed (e.g. when ``t`` is given as an :obj:`int`, indicating "seconds from ``reference_t``"). Defaults to now (the time at which this function is called). If ``t`` is given as an absolute representation of date & time (i.e. a ``datetime.datetime`` object), ``reference_timestamp`` is not relevant and so its value should be ``None``. If this is not the case, a ``ValueError`` will be raised. Returns: (float | None) The return value depends on the type of argument ``t``. If ``t`` is given as a time increment (i.e. as a obj:`int`, :obj:`float` or :obj:`datetime.timedelta`), then the return value will be ``reference_t`` + ``t``. Else if it is given as an absolute date/time value (i.e. a :obj:`datetime.datetime` object), the equivalent value as a POSIX timestamp will be returned. Finally, if it is a time of the day without date (i.e. a :obj:`datetime.time` object), the return value is the nearest future occurrence of that time of day. Raises: TypeError: if `t`'s type is not one of those described above """ if reference_timestamp is None: reference_timestamp = time.time() elif isinstance(t, dtm.datetime): raise ValueError('t is an (absolute) datetime while reference_timestamp is not None') if isinstance(t, dtm.timedelta): return reference_timestamp + t.total_seconds() elif isinstance(t, Number): return reference_timestamp + t elif isinstance(t, dtm.time): if t.tzinfo is not None: reference_dt = dtm.datetime.fromtimestamp(reference_timestamp, tz=t.tzinfo) else: reference_dt = dtm.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(reference_timestamp) # assume UTC reference_date = reference_dt.date() reference_time = reference_dt.timetz() if reference_time > t: # if the time of day has passed today, use tomorrow reference_date += dtm.timedelta(days=1) return _datetime_to_float_timestamp(dtm.datetime.combine(reference_date, t)) elif isinstance(t, dtm.datetime): return _datetime_to_float_timestamp(t) raise TypeError('Unable to convert {} object to timestamp'.format(type(t).__name__)) def to_timestamp(dt_obj, reference_timestamp=None): """ Wrapper over :func:`to_float_timestamp` which returns an integer (the float value truncated down to the nearest integer). See the documentation for :func:`to_float_timestamp` for more details. """ return int(to_float_timestamp(dt_obj, reference_timestamp)) if dt_obj is not None else None def from_timestamp(unixtime, tzinfo=dtm.timezone.utc): """ Converts an (integer) unix timestamp to a timezone aware datetime object. ``None`` s are left alone (i.e. ``from_timestamp(None)`` is ``None``). Args: unixtime (int): integer POSIX timestamp tzinfo (:obj:`datetime.tzinfo`, optional): The timezone, the timestamp is to be converted to. Defaults to UTC. Returns: timezone aware equivalent :obj:`datetime.datetime` value if ``timestamp`` is not ``None``; else ``None`` """ if unixtime is None: return None if tzinfo is not None: return dtm.datetime.fromtimestamp(unixtime, tz=tzinfo) else: return dtm.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(unixtime) # -------- end -------- def mention_html(user_id, name): """ Args: user_id (:obj:`int`) The user's id which you want to mention. name (:obj:`str`) The name the mention is showing. Returns: :obj:`str`: The inline mention for the user as html. """ if isinstance(user_id, int): return u'{}'.format(user_id, escape(name)) def mention_markdown(user_id, name, version=1): """ Args: user_id (:obj:`int`) The user's id which you want to mention. name (:obj:`str`) The name the mention is showing. version (:obj:`int` | :obj:`str`): Use to specify the version of telegrams Markdown. Either ``1`` or ``2``. Defaults to ``1`` Returns: :obj:`str`: The inline mention for the user as markdown. """ if isinstance(user_id, int): return u'[{}](tg://user?id={})'.format(escape_markdown(name, version=version), user_id) def effective_message_type(entity): """ Extracts the type of message as a string identifier from a :class:`telegram.Message` or a :class:`telegram.Update`. Args: entity (:obj:`Update` | :obj:`Message`) The ``update`` or ``message`` to extract from Returns: str: One of ``Message.MESSAGE_TYPES`` """ # Importing on file-level yields cyclic Import Errors from telegram import Message from telegram import Update if isinstance(entity, Message): message = entity elif isinstance(entity, Update): message = entity.effective_message else: raise TypeError("entity is not Message or Update (got: {})".format(type(entity))) for i in Message.MESSAGE_TYPES: if getattr(message, i, None): return i return None def create_deep_linked_url(bot_username, payload=None, group=False): """ Creates a deep-linked URL for this ``bot_username`` with the specified ``payload``. See https://core.telegram.org/bots#deep-linking to learn more. The ``payload`` may consist of the following characters: ``A-Z, a-z, 0-9, _, -`` Note: Works well in conjunction with ``CommandHandler("start", callback, filters = Filters.regex('payload'))`` Examples: ``create_deep_linked_url(bot.get_me().username, "some-params")`` Args: bot_username (:obj:`str`): The username to link to payload (:obj:`str`, optional): Parameters to encode in the created URL group (:obj:`bool`, optional): If `True` the user is prompted to select a group to add the bot to. If `False`, opens a one-on-one conversation with the bot. Defaults to `False`. Returns: :obj:`str`: An URL to start the bot with specific parameters """ if bot_username is None or len(bot_username) <= 3: raise ValueError("You must provide a valid bot_username.") base_url = 'https://t.me/{}'.format(bot_username) if not payload: return base_url if len(payload) > 64: raise ValueError("The deep-linking payload must not exceed 64 characters.") if not re.match(r'^[A-Za-z0-9_-]+$', payload): raise ValueError("Only the following characters are allowed for deep-linked " "URLs: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, _ and -") if group: key = 'startgroup' else: key = 'start' return '{0}?{1}={2}'.format( base_url, key, payload ) def encode_conversations_to_json(conversations): """Helper method to encode a conversations dict (that uses tuples as keys) to a JSON-serializable way. Use :attr:`_decode_conversations_from_json` to decode. Args: conversations (:obj:`dict`): The conversations dict to transofrm to JSON. Returns: :obj:`str`: The JSON-serialized conversations dict """ tmp = {} for handler, states in conversations.items(): tmp[handler] = {} for key, state in states.items(): tmp[handler][json.dumps(key)] = state return json.dumps(tmp) def decode_conversations_from_json(json_string): """Helper method to decode a conversations dict (that uses tuples as keys) from a JSON-string created with :attr:`_encode_conversations_to_json`. Args: json_string (:obj:`str`): The conversations dict as JSON string. Returns: :obj:`dict`: The conversations dict after decoding """ tmp = json.loads(json_string) conversations = {} for handler, states in tmp.items(): conversations[handler] = {} for key, state in states.items(): conversations[handler][tuple(json.loads(key))] = state return conversations def decode_user_chat_data_from_json(data): """Helper method to decode chat or user data (that uses ints as keys) from a JSON-string. Args: data (:obj:`str`): The user/chat_data dict as JSON string. Returns: :obj:`dict`: The user/chat_data defaultdict after decoding """ tmp = defaultdict(dict) decoded_data = json.loads(data) for user, data in decoded_data.items(): user = int(user) tmp[user] = {} for key, value in data.items(): try: key = int(key) except ValueError: pass tmp[user][key] = value return tmp class DefaultValue: """Wrapper for immutable default arguments that allows to check, if the default value was set explicitly. Usage:: DefaultOne = DefaultValue(1) def f(arg=DefaultOne): if arg is DefaultOne: print('`arg` is the default') arg = arg.value else: print('`arg` was set explicitly') print('`arg` = ' + str(arg)) This yields:: >>> f() `arg` is the default `arg` = 1 >>> f(1) `arg` was set explicitly `arg` = 1 >>> f(2) `arg` was set explicitly `arg` = 2 Also allows to evaluate truthiness:: default = DefaultValue(value) if default: ... is equivalent to:: default = DefaultValue(value) if value: ... Attributes: value (:obj:`obj`): The value of the default argument Args: value (:obj:`obj`): The value of the default argument """ def __init__(self, value=None): self.value = value def __bool__(self): return bool(self.value) DEFAULT_NONE = DefaultValue(None) """:class:`DefaultValue`: Default `None`"""