python-telegram-bot/examples/inlinebot.py
Bibo-Joshi 92b9370c23
Improve Code Quality (#2131)
* Make pre-commit more strict

* Get pylint to read setup.cfg

* Make pylint & mypy happy aka ignore all the things

* use LogRecord.getMessage() in tests

* Make noam happy

* Update both pylint & mypy while we're at it

* Bring reqs-dev and makefile up to speed

* try making pre-commit happy

* fix jobqueue tests on the fly
2020-10-31 16:33:34 +01:00

96 lines
3.2 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# pylint: disable=W0613, C0116
# type: ignore[union-attr]
# This program is dedicated to the public domain under the CC0 license.
"""
First, a few handler functions are defined. Then, those functions are passed to
the Dispatcher and registered at their respective places.
Then, the bot is started and runs until we press Ctrl-C on the command line.
Usage:
Basic inline bot example. Applies different text transformations.
Press Ctrl-C on the command line or send a signal to the process to stop the
bot.
"""
import logging
from uuid import uuid4
from telegram import InlineQueryResultArticle, ParseMode, InputTextMessageContent, Update
from telegram.ext import Updater, InlineQueryHandler, CommandHandler, CallbackContext
from telegram.utils.helpers import escape_markdown
# Enable logging
logging.basicConfig(
format='%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s', level=logging.INFO
)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
# Define a few command handlers. These usually take the two arguments update and
# context. Error handlers also receive the raised TelegramError object in error.
def start(update: Update, context: CallbackContext) -> None:
"""Send a message when the command /start is issued."""
update.message.reply_text('Hi!')
def help_command(update: Update, context: CallbackContext) -> None:
"""Send a message when the command /help is issued."""
update.message.reply_text('Help!')
def inlinequery(update: Update, context: CallbackContext) -> None:
"""Handle the inline query."""
query = update.inline_query.query
results = [
InlineQueryResultArticle(
id=uuid4(), title="Caps", input_message_content=InputTextMessageContent(query.upper())
),
InlineQueryResultArticle(
id=uuid4(),
title="Bold",
input_message_content=InputTextMessageContent(
"*{}*".format(escape_markdown(query)), parse_mode=ParseMode.MARKDOWN
),
),
InlineQueryResultArticle(
id=uuid4(),
title="Italic",
input_message_content=InputTextMessageContent(
"_{}_".format(escape_markdown(query)), parse_mode=ParseMode.MARKDOWN
),
),
]
update.inline_query.answer(results)
def main() -> None:
# Create the Updater and pass it your bot's token.
# Make sure to set use_context=True to use the new context based callbacks
# Post version 12 this will no longer be necessary
updater = Updater("TOKEN", use_context=True)
# Get the dispatcher to register handlers
dispatcher = updater.dispatcher
# on different commands - answer in Telegram
dispatcher.add_handler(CommandHandler("start", start))
dispatcher.add_handler(CommandHandler("help", help_command))
# on noncommand i.e message - echo the message on Telegram
dispatcher.add_handler(InlineQueryHandler(inlinequery))
# Start the Bot
updater.start_polling()
# Block until the user presses Ctrl-C or the process receives SIGINT,
# SIGTERM or SIGABRT. This should be used most of the time, since
# start_polling() is non-blocking and will stop the bot gracefully.
updater.idle()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()