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In this tutorial we will explain how to build a Bot with R and
telegram.bot
following the next steps:
Updater
objectFirst, though, let’s introduce the telegram.bot
package.
In order to build a bot that is continuously running and is able to
respond to multiple input data formats, the telegram.bot
package features several R6
classes, but the two most
important ones here are Updater
and
Dispatcher
.
The Updater
class continuously fetches new updates from
Telegram and passes them on to the Dispatcher
class. If you
create an Updater
object, it will create a
Dispatcher
. You can then register handlers of different
types in the Dispatcher
, which will sort the updates
fetched by the Updater
according to the handlers you
registered, and deliver them to a callback function that you defined.
Every handler is an instance of any subclass of the Handler
class.
To begin, you’ll need an Access Token. If you already read and followed Introduction to the API, you can use the one you generated then. If not: To generate an Access Token, you have to talk to @BotFather and follow a few simple steps (described here). You should really read the introduction first, though.
With that said, let’s get started!
First, you first must create an Updater
object. Replace
TOKEN
with your Telegram Bot’s API Access Token, which
looks something like
123456:ABC-DEF1234ghIkl-zyx57W2v1u123ew11
.
library(telegram.bot)
<- Updater(token = "TOKEN") updater
Recommendation: Following Hadley’s
API guidelines it’s unsafe to type the TOKEN
just in
the R script. It’s better to use environment variables set in
.Renviron
file.
So let’s say you have named your bot RTelegramBot
(it’s
the first question you answered to the BotFather when creating
it); you can open the .Renviron
file with the R
commands:
file.edit(path.expand(file.path("~", ".Renviron")))
And put the following line with your TOKEN
in your
.Renviron
:
=TOKEN R_TELEGRAM_BOT_RTelegramBot
If you follow the suggested R_TELEGRAM_BOT_
prefix
convention you’ll be able to use the bot_token
function
(otherwise you’ll have to get these variable from
Sys.getenv
).
After you’ve finished these steps restart R in order
to have working environment variables. You can then create the
Updater
object as:
<- Updater(token = bot_token("RTelegramBot")) updater
Now, you can define a function that should process a specific type of update:
<- function(bot, update){
start $sendMessage(chat_id = update$message$chat_id,
bottext = sprintf("Hello %s!", update$message$from$first_name))
}
The goal is to have this function called every time the Bot receives
a Telegram message that contains the /start
command. To
accomplish that, you can use a CommandHandler
(one of the
provided Handler
sub-classes) and register it in the
updaters
’s dispatcher
(which is done with the
+
operator):
<- CommandHandler("start", start)
start_handler <- updater + start_handler updater
And that’s all you need. To start the bot, run:
$start_polling() updater
Give it a try! Start a chat with your bot and issue the
/start
command - if all went right, it will reply.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.