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royalnet/docs/html/_sources/creatingacommand.rst.txt

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.. currentmodule:: royalnet.commands
Royalnet Commands
====================================
A Royalnet Command is a small script that is run whenever a specific message is sent to a Royalnet interface.
A Command code looks like this: ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
class PingCommand(Command):
name = "ping"
description = "Play ping-pong with the bot."
def __init__(self, interface):
# This code is run just once, while the bot is starting
super().__init__()
async def run(self, args, data):
# This code is run every time the command is called
await data.reply("Pong!")
Creating a new Command
------------------------------------
First, think of a ``name`` for your command.
It's the name your command will be called with: for example, the "spaghetti" command will be called by typing **/spaghetti** in chat.
Try to keep the name as short as possible, while staying specific enough so no other command will have the same name.
Next, create a new Python file with the ``name`` you have thought of.
The previously mentioned "spaghetti" command should have a file called ``spaghetti.py``.
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Then, in the first row of the file, import the :py:class:`Command` class from royalnet, and create a new class inheriting from it: ::
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from royalnet.commands import Command
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
...
Inside the class, override the attributes ``name`` and ``description`` with respectively the **name of the command** and a **small description of what the command will do**: ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
name = "spaghetti"
description = "Send a spaghetti emoji in the chat."
Now override the :py:meth:`Command.run` method, adding the code you want the bot to run when the command is called.
To send a message in the chat the command was called in, you can use the :py:meth:`CommandData.reply` method: ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
name = "spaghetti"
description = "Send a spaghetti emoji in the chat."
async def run(self, args, data):
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await data.reply("🍝")
And... it's done! The command is ready to be added to a bot!
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Command arguments
------------------------------------
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A command can have some arguments passed by the user: for example, on Telegram an user may type `/spaghetti carbonara al-dente`
to pass the :py:class:`str` `"carbonara al-dente"` to the command code.
These arguments can be accessed in multiple ways through the ``args`` parameter passed to the :py:meth:`Command.run`
method.
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If you want your command to use arguments, override the ``syntax`` class attribute with a brief description of the
syntax of your command, possibly using (round parentheses) for required arguments and [square brackets] for optional
ones. ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
name = "spaghetti"
description = "Send a spaghetti emoji in the chat."
syntax = "(requestedpasta)"
async def run(self, args, data):
await data.reply(f"🍝 Here's your {args[0]}!")
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Direct access
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can consider arguments as if they were separated by spaces.
You can then access command arguments directly by number as if the args object was a list of :py:class:`str`.
If you request an argument with a certain number, but the argument does not exist, an
:py:exc:`royalnet.error.InvalidInputError` is raised, making the arguments accessed in this way **required**. ::
args[0]
# "carbonara"
args[1]
# "al-dente"
args[2]
# InvalidInputError() is raised
Optional access
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you don't want arguments to be required, you can access them through the :py:meth:`CommandArgs.optional` method: it
will return :py:const:`None` if the argument wasn't passed, making it **optional**. ::
args.optional(0)
# "carbonara"
args.optional(1)
# "al-dente"
args.optional(2)
# None
You can specify a default result too, so that the method will return it instead of returning :py:const:`None`: ::
args.optional(2, default="banana")
# "banana"
Full string
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you want the full argument string, you can use the :py:meth:`CommandArgs.joined` method. ::
args.joined()
# "carbonara al-dente"
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You can specify a minimum number of arguments too, so that an :py:exc:`InvalidInputError` will be
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raised if not enough arguments are present: ::
args.joined(require_at_least=3)
# InvalidInputError() is raised
Regular expressions
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For more complex commands, you may want to get arguments through `regular expressions <https://regexr.com/>`_.
You can then use the :py:meth:`CommandArgs.match` method, which tries to match a pattern to the command argument string,
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which returns a tuple of the matched groups and raises an :py:exc:`InvalidInputError` if there is no match.
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To match a pattern, :py:func:`re.match` is used, meaning that Python will try to match only at the beginning of the string. ::
args.match(r"(carb\w+)")
# ("carbonara",)
args.match(r"(al-\w+)")
# InvalidInputError() is raised
args.match(r"\s*(al-\w+)")
# ("al-dente",)
args.match(r"\s*(carb\w+)\s*(al-\w+)")
# ("carbonara", "al-dente")
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Raising errors
---------------------------------------------
If you want to display an error message to the user, you can raise a :py:exc:`CommandError` using the error message as argument: ::
if not kitchen.is_open():
raise CommandError("The kitchen is closed. Come back later!")
You can also manually raise :py:exc:`InvalidInputError` to redisplay the command syntax, along with your error message: ::
if args[0] not in allowed_pasta:
raise InvalidInputError("The specified pasta type is invalid.")
If you need a Royalnet feature that's not available on the current interface, you can raise an
:py:exc:`UnsupportedError` with a brief description of what's missing: ::
if interface.name != "telegram":
raise UnsupportedError("This command can only be run on Telegram interfaces.")
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Running code at the initialization of the bot
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---------------------------------------------
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You can run code while the bot is starting by overriding the :py:meth:`Command.__init__` function.
You should keep the ``super().__init__(interface)`` call at the start of it, so that the :py:class:`Command` instance is
initialized properly, then add your code after it.
You can add fields to the command to keep **shared data between multiple command calls** (but not bot restarts): it may
be useful for fetching external static data and keeping it until the bot is restarted, or to store references to all the
:py:class:`asyncio.Task` started by the bot. ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
name = "spaghetti"
description = "Send a spaghetti emoji in the chat."
syntax = "(pasta)"
def __init__(self, interface):
super().__init__(interface)
self.requested_pasta = []
async def run(self, args, data):
pasta = args[0]
if pasta in self.requested_pasta:
await data.reply(f"⚠️ This pasta was already requested before.")
return
self.requested_pasta.append(pasta)
await data.reply(f"🍝 Here's your {pasta}!")
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Coroutines and slow operations
------------------------------------
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You may have noticed that in the previous examples we used ``await data.reply("🍝")`` instead of just ``data.reply("🍝")``.
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This is because :py:meth:`CommandData.reply` isn't a simple method: it is a coroutine, a special kind of function that
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can be executed separately from the rest of the code, allowing the bot to do other things in the meantime.
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By adding the ``await`` keyword before the ``data.reply("🍝")``, we tell the bot that it can do other things, like
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receiving new messages, while the message is being sent.
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You should avoid running slow normal functions inside bot commands, as they will stop the bot from working until they
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are finished and may cause bugs in other parts of the code! ::
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async def run(self, args, data):
# Don't do this!
image = download_1_terabyte_of_spaghetti("right_now", from="italy")
...
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If the slow function you want does not cause any side effect, you can wrap it with the :py:func:`royalnet.utils.asyncify`
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function: ::
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async def run(self, args, data):
# If the called function has no side effect, you can do this!
image = await asyncify(download_1_terabyte_of_spaghetti, "right_now", from="italy")
...
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Avoid using :py:func:`time.sleep` function, as it is considered a slow operation: use instead :py:func:`asyncio.sleep`,
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a coroutine that does the same exact thing.
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Delete the invoking message
------------------------------------
The invoking message of a command is the message that the user sent that the bot recognized as a command; for example,
the message ``/spaghetti carbonara`` is the invoking message for the ``spaghetti`` command run.
You can have the bot delete the invoking message for a command by calling the :py:class:`CommandData.delete_invoking`
method: ::
async def run(self, args, data):
await data.delete_invoking()
Not all interfaces support deleting messages; by default, if the interface does not support deletions, the call is
ignored.
You can have the method raise an error if the message can't be deleted by setting the ``error_if_unavailable`` parameter
to True: ::
async def run(self, args, data):
try:
await data.delete_invoking(error_if_unavailable=True)
except royalnet.error.UnsupportedError:
await data.reply("🚫 The message could not be deleted.")
else:
await data.reply("✅ The message was deleted!")
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Using the database
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------------------------------------
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Bots can be connected to a PostgreSQL database through a special SQLAlchemy interface called
:py:class:`royalnet.database.Alchemy`.
If the connection is established, the ``self.interface.alchemy`` and ``self.interface.session`` fields will be
available for use in commands.
``self.interface.alchemy`` is an instance of :py:class:`royalnet.database.Alchemy`, which contains the
:py:class:`sqlalchemy.engine.Engine`, metadata and tables, while ``self.interface.session`` is a
:py:class:`sqlalchemy.orm.session.Session`, and can be interacted in the same way as one.
If you want to use :py:class:`royalnet.database.Alchemy` in your command, you should override the
``require_alchemy_tables`` field with the :py:class:`set` of Alchemy tables you need. ::
from royalnet.commands import Command
from royalnet.database.tables import Royal
class SpaghettiCommand(Command):
name = "spaghetti"
description = "Send a spaghetti emoji in the chat."
syntax = "(pasta)"
requrire_alchemy_tables = {Royal}
...
Querying the database
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can :py:class:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query` the database using the SQLAlchemy ORM.
The SQLAlchemy tables can be found inside :py:class:`royalnet.database.Alchemy` with the same name they were created
from, if they were specified in ``require_alchemy_tables``. ::
RoyalTable = self.interface.alchemy.Royal
query = self.interface.session.query(RoyalTable)
Adding filters to the query
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can filter the query results with the :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.filter` method.
.. note:: Remember to always use a table column as first comparision element, as it won't work otherwise.
::
query = query.filter(RoyalTable.role == "Member")
Ordering the results of a query
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can order the query results in **ascending order** with the :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.order_by` method. ::
query = query.order_by(RoyalTable.username)
Additionally, you can append the `.desc()` method to a table column to sort in **descending order**: ::
query = query.order_by(RoyalTable.username.desc())
Fetching the results of a query
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can fetch the query results with the :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.all`,
:py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.first`, :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.one` and
:py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.one_or_none` methods.
Remember to use :py:func:`royalnet.utils.asyncify` when fetching results, as it may take a while!
Use :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.all` if you want a :py:class:`list` of **all results**: ::
results: list = await asyncify(query.all)
Use :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.first` if you want **the first result** of the list, or :py:const:`None` if
there are no results: ::
result: typing.Union[..., None] = await asyncify(query.first)
Use :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.one` if you expect to have **a single result**, and you want the command to
raise an error if any different number of results is returned: ::
result: ... = await asyncify(query.one) # Raises an error if there are no results or more than a result.
Use :py:meth:`sqlalchemy.orm.query.Query.one_or_none` if you expect to have **a single result**, or **nothing**, and
if you want the command to raise an error if the number of results is greater than one. ::
result: typing.Union[..., None] = await asyncify(query.one_or_none) # Raises an error if there is more than a result.
More Alchemy
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can read more about :py:mod:`sqlalchemy` at their `website <https://www.sqlalchemy.org/>`_.
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Comunicating via Royalnet
------------------------------------
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This section will be changed soon; as such, it will not be documented.