python-telegram-bot/telegram/ext/callbackcontext.py
Jasmin Bom b5891a6a61 Making merged filters short-circuit (#1350)
* Making merged filters short-circuit

* Add notes to docs about short-circuiting
2019-03-14 09:03:21 +01:00

146 lines
6 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# A library that provides a Python interface to the Telegram Bot API
# Copyright (C) 2015-2018
# Leandro Toledo de Souza <devs@python-telegram-bot.org>
#
# 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 the CallbackContext class."""
from telegram import Update
class CallbackContext(object):
"""
This is a context object passed to the callback called by :class:`telegram.ext.Handler`
or by the :class:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher` in an error handler added by
:attr:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher.add_error_handler` or to the callback of a
:class:`telegram.ext.Job`.
Note:
:class:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher` will create a single context for an entire update. This
means that if you got 2 handlers in different groups and they both get called, they will
get passed the same `CallbackContext` object (of course with proper attributes like
`.matches` differing). This allows you to add custom attributes in a lower handler group
callback, and then subsequently access those attributes in a higher handler group callback.
Note that the attributes on `CallbackContext` might change in the future, so make sure to
use a fairly unique name for the attributes.
Warning:
Do not combine custom attributes and @run_async. Due to how @run_async works, it will
almost certainly execute the callbacks for an update out of order, and the attributes
that you think you added will not be present.
Attributes:
chat_data (:obj:`dict`, optional): A dict that can be used to keep any data in. For each
update from the same chat it will be the same ``dict``.
user_data (:obj:`dict`, optional): A dict that can be used to keep any data in. For each
update from the same user it will be the same ``dict``.
matches (List[:obj:`re match object`], optional): If the associated update originated from
a regex-supported handler or had a :class:`Filters.regex`, this will contain a list of
match objects for every pattern where ``re.search(pattern, string)`` returned a match.
Note that filters short circuit, so combined regex filters will not always
be evaluated.
args (List[:obj:`str`], optional): Arguments passed to a command if the associated update
is handled by :class:`telegram.ext.CommandHandler`, :class:`telegram.ext.PrefixHandler`
or :class:`telegram.ext.StringCommandHandler`. It contains a list of the words in the
text after the command, using any whitespace string as a delimiter.
error (:class:`telegram.TelegramError`, optional): The Telegram error that was raised.
Only present when passed to a error handler registered with
:attr:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher.add_error_handler`.
job (:class:`telegram.ext.Job`): The job that that originated this callback.
Only present when passed to the callback of :class:`telegram.ext.Job`.
"""
def __init__(self, dispatcher):
"""
Args:
dispatcher (:class:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher`):
"""
if not dispatcher.use_context:
raise ValueError('CallbackContext should not be used with a non context aware '
'dispatcher!')
self._dispatcher = dispatcher
self.chat_data = None
self.user_data = None
self.args = None
self.matches = None
self.error = None
self.job = None
@classmethod
def from_error(cls, update, error, dispatcher):
self = cls.from_update(update, dispatcher)
self.error = error
return self
@classmethod
def from_update(cls, update, dispatcher):
self = cls(dispatcher)
if update is not None and isinstance(update, Update):
chat = update.effective_chat
user = update.effective_user
if chat:
self.chat_data = dispatcher.chat_data[chat.id]
if user:
self.user_data = dispatcher.user_data[user.id]
return self
@classmethod
def from_job(cls, job, dispatcher):
self = cls(dispatcher)
self.job = job
return self
def update(self, data):
self.__dict__.update(data)
@property
def bot(self):
""":class:`telegram.Bot`: The bot associated with this context."""
return self._dispatcher.bot
@property
def job_queue(self):
"""
:class:`telegram.ext.JobQueue`: The ``JobQueue`` used by the
:class:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher` and (usually) the :class:`telegram.ext.Updater`
associated with this context.
"""
return self._dispatcher.job_queue
@property
def update_queue(self):
"""
:class:`queue.Queue`: The ``Queue`` instance used by the
:class:`telegram.ext.Dispatcher` and (usually) the :class:`telegram.ext.Updater`
associated with this context.
"""
return self._dispatcher.update_queue
@property
def match(self):
"""
`Regex match type`: The first match from :attr:`matches`.
Useful if you are only filtering using a single regex filter.
Returns `None` if :attr:`matches` is empty.
"""
try:
return self.matches[0] # pylint: disable=unsubscriptable-object
except (IndexError, TypeError):
return None