mirror of
https://github.com/python-telegram-bot/python-telegram-bot.git
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3f28633e79
filters are now functions instead of enum like objects. their definitions were moved to messagehandler.py
171 lines
5.8 KiB
Python
171 lines
5.8 KiB
Python
#!/usr/bin/env python
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
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#
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# Example Bot to show some of the functionality of the library
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# This program is dedicated to the public domain under the CC0 license.
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"""
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This Bot uses the Updater class to handle the bot.
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First, a few handler functions are defined. Then, those functions are passed to
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the Dispatcher and registered at their respective places.
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Then, the bot is started and the CLI-Loop is entered, where all text inputs are
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inserted into the update queue for the bot to handle.
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Usage:
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Repeats messages with a delay.
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Reply to last chat from the command line by typing "/reply <text>"
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Type 'stop' on the command line to stop the bot.
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"""
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from telegram.ext import Updater, StringCommandHandler, StringRegexHandler, \
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MessageHandler, CommandHandler, RegexHandler, Filters
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from telegram.ext.dispatcher import run_async
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from time import sleep
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import logging
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# Enable Logging
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logging.basicConfig(
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format='%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s',
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level=logging.INFO)
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logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
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# We use this var to save the last chat id, so we can reply to it
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last_chat_id = 0
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# Define a few (command) handler callback functions. These usually take the
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# two arguments bot and update. Error handlers also receive the raised
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# TelegramError object in error.
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def start(bot, update):
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""" Answer in Telegram """
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bot.sendMessage(update.message.chat_id, text='Hi!')
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def help(bot, update):
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""" Answer in Telegram """
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bot.sendMessage(update.message.chat_id, text='Help!')
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def any_message(bot, update):
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""" Print to console """
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# Save last chat_id to use in reply handler
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global last_chat_id
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last_chat_id = update.message.chat_id
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logger.info("New message\nFrom: %s\nchat_id: %d\nText: %s" %
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(update.message.from_user,
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update.message.chat_id,
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update.message.text))
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@run_async
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def message(bot, update):
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"""
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Example for an asynchronous handler. It's not guaranteed that replies will
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be in order when using @run_async. Also, you have to include **kwargs in
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your parameter list. The kwargs contain all optional parameters that are
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"""
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sleep(2) # IO-heavy operation here
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bot.sendMessage(update.message.chat_id, text='Echo: %s' %
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update.message.text)
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# These handlers are for updates of type str. We use them to react to inputs
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# on the command line interface
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def cli_reply(bot, update, args):
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"""
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For any update of type telegram.Update or str that contains a command, you
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can get the argument list by appending args to the function parameters.
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Here, we reply to the last active chat with the text after the command.
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"""
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if last_chat_id is not 0:
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bot.sendMessage(chat_id=last_chat_id, text=' '.join(args))
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def cli_noncommand(bot, update, update_queue):
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"""
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You can also get the update queue as an argument in any handler by
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appending it to the argument list. Be careful with this though.
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Here, we put the input string back into the queue, but as a command.
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To learn more about those optional handler parameters, read the
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documentation of the Handler classes.
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"""
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update_queue.put('/%s' % update)
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def error(bot, update, error):
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""" Print error to console """
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logger.warn('Update %s caused error %s' % (update, error))
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def main():
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# Create the EventHandler and pass it your bot's token.
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token = 'TOKEN'
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updater = Updater(token, workers=10)
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# Get the dispatcher to register handlers
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dp = updater.dispatcher
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# This is how we add handlers for Telegram messages
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dp.addHandler(CommandHandler("start", start))
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dp.addHandler(CommandHandler("help", help))
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# Message handlers only receive updates that don't contain commands
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dp.addHandler(MessageHandler([Filters.text], message))
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# Regex handlers will receive all updates on which their regex matches,
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# but we have to add it in a separate group, since in one group,
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# only one handler will be executed
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dp.addHandler(RegexHandler('.*', any_message), group='log')
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# String handlers work pretty much the same. Note that we have to tell
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# the handler to pass the args or update_queue parameter
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dp.addHandler(StringCommandHandler('reply', cli_reply, pass_args=True))
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dp.addHandler(StringRegexHandler('[^/].*', cli_noncommand,
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pass_update_queue=True))
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# All TelegramErrors are caught for you and delivered to the error
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# handler(s). Other types of Errors are not caught.
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dp.addErrorHandler(error)
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# Start the Bot and store the update Queue, so we can insert updates
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update_queue = updater.start_polling(timeout=10)
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'''
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# Alternatively, run with webhook:
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update_queue = updater.start_webhook('0.0.0.0',
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443,
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url_path=token,
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cert='cert.pem',
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key='key.key',
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webhook_url='https://example.com/%s'
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% token)
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# Or, if SSL is handled by a reverse proxy, the webhook URL is already set
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# and the reverse proxy is configured to deliver directly to port 6000:
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update_queue = updater.start_webhook('0.0.0.0', 6000)
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'''
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# Start CLI-Loop
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while True:
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try:
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text = raw_input()
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except NameError:
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text = input()
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# Gracefully stop the event handler
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if text == 'stop':
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updater.stop()
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break
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# else, put the text into the update queue to be handled by our handlers
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elif len(text) > 0:
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update_queue.put(text)
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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main()
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