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    github.com/zBNF/arikawa/v3

Package arikawa contains a set of modular packages that allows you to make a Discord bot or any type of session (OAuth unsupported). Package session is the most simple abstraction, which combines the API package and the Gateway websocket package together into one. This could be used for minimal bots that only use gateway events and such. Package state abstracts on top of session and provides a local cache of API calls and events. Bots that either don't need a command router or already has its own should use this package. Package bot abstracts on top of state and provides a command router based on Go code. This is similar to discord.py's API, only it's Go and there's no optional arguments (yet, although it could be worked around). Most bots are recommended to use this package, as it's the easiest way to make a bot. Package voice provides an abstraction on top of State and adds voice support. This allows bots to join voice channels and talk. The package uses an io.Writer approach rather than a channel, contrary to other Discord libraries.


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arikawa

 Pipeline Status  Report Card      Godoc Reference  Examples         Discord Gophers  Hime Arikawa

A Golang library for the Discord API.

Examples

Commands (Hybrid)

commands-hybrid is an alternative variant of commands, where the program permits being hosted either as a Gateway-based daemon or as a web server using the Interactions Webhook API.

Both examples demonstrate adding interaction commands into the bot as well as an example of routing those commands to be executed.

Simple

Simple bot example without any state. All it does is logging messages sent into the console. Run with BOT_TOKEN="TOKEN" go run .. This example only demonstrates the most simple needs; in most cases, bots should use the state or the bot router.

Note that Discord discourages use of bots that do not use the interactions API, meaning that this example should not be used for bots.

Undeleter

A slightly more complicated example. This bot uses a local state to cache everything, including messages. It detects when someone deletes a message, logging the content into the console.

This example demonstrates the PreHandler feature of the state library. PreHandler calls all handlers that are registered (separately from the session), calling them before the state is updated.

Note that Discord discourages use of bots that do not use the interactions API, meaning that this example should not be used for bots.

Bare Minimum Messaging Example

The least amount of code recommended to have a bot that logs all messages to console.

package main

import (
	"context"
	"log"
	"os"
	"os/signal"

	"github.com/zBNF/arikawa/v3/gateway"
	"github.com/zBNF/arikawa/v3/state"
)

func main() {
	s := state.New("Bot " + os.Getenv("BOT_TOKEN"))
	s.AddIntents(gateway.IntentGuilds | gateway.IntentGuildMessages)
	s.AddHandler(func(m *gateway.MessageCreateEvent) {
		log.Printf("%s: %s", m.Author.Username, m.Content)
	})

	ctx, cancel := signal.NotifyContext(context.Background(), os.Interrupt)
	defer cancel()

	if err := s.Connect(ctx); err != nil {
		log.Println("cannot connect:", err)
	}
}

Where is package bot?

Package bot has now been deprecated after Discord's decision to eventually deprecate regular message events as means of commanding bots. We've decided to move the old bot package into utils/ to signify that it should no longer be used.

Moving bot into utils/ will allow us to eventually rewrite the whole package to use slash commands without worrying about breaking the old (v2) API, which is great, because almost nothing translates well from the previous design to slash commands.

Comparison: Why not discordgo?

Discordgo is great. It's the first library that I used when I was learning Go. Though there are some things that I disagree on. Here are some ways that this library is different:

  • Better package structure: this library divides the Discord library up into smaller packages.
  • Cleaner API/Gateway structure separation: this library separates fields that would only appear in Gateway events, so to not cause confusion.
  • Automatic un-pagination: this library automatically un-paginates endpoints that would otherwise not return everything fully.
  • Flexible underlying abstractions: this library allows plugging in different JSON and Websocket implementations, as well as direct access to the HTTP client.
  • Flexible API abstractions: because packages are separated, the developer could choose to use a lower level package (such as gateway) or a higher level package (such as state).
  • Pre-handlers in the state: this allows the developers to access items from the state storage before they're removed.
  • Pluggable state storages: although only having a default state storage in the library, it is abstracted with an interface, making it possible to implement a custom remote or local state storage.
  • REST-updated state: this library will call the REST API if it can't find things in the state, which is useful for keeping it updated.
  • No code generation: just so the library is a lot easier to maintain.

Testing

The package includes integration tests that require $BOT_TOKEN. To run these tests, do:

export BOT_TOKEN="<BOT_TOKEN>"
go test -tags integration -race ./...

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Last updated on 11 Oct 2022

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