mirror of
https://github.com/Mikaela/Limnoria.git
synced 2024-11-16 07:29:23 +01:00
572 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
572 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
WRITING YOUR FIRST SUPYBOT PLUGIN
|
|
|
|
Introduction
|
|
============
|
|
First things first - what you need to do before writing a Supybot plugin.
|
|
|
|
Ok, so you want to write a plugin for Supybot. Good, then this is the place to
|
|
be. We're going to start from the top (the highest level, where Supybot code
|
|
does the most work for you) and move lower after that.
|
|
|
|
So have you used Supybot? If not, you need to go use it. This will help you
|
|
understand crucial things like the way the various commands work and it is
|
|
essential prior to embarking upon the plugin-development excursion detailed in
|
|
the following pages. If you haven't used Supybot, come back to this document
|
|
after you've used it for a while and gotten a feel for it.
|
|
|
|
So, now that we know you've used Supybot, we'll start getting into details.
|
|
We'll go through this tutorial by actually writing a new plugin, named Random
|
|
with just a few simple commands.
|
|
|
|
Caveat: you'll need to have Supybot installed on the machine you
|
|
intend to develop plugins on. This will not only allow you to test
|
|
the plugins with a live bot, but it will also provide you with
|
|
several nice scripts which aid the development of plugins. Most
|
|
notably, it provides you with the supybot-plugin-create script which
|
|
we will use in the next section... Creating a minimal plugin This
|
|
section describes using the 'supybot-plugin-create' script to create
|
|
a minimal plugin which we will enhance in later sections.
|
|
|
|
The recommended way to start writing a plugin is to use the wizard provided,
|
|
'supybot-plugin-create'. Run this from within your local plugins directory, so
|
|
we will be able to load the plugin and test it out.
|
|
|
|
It's very easy to follow, because basically all you have to do is answer three
|
|
questions. Here's an example session:
|
|
|
|
[ddipaolo@quinn ../python/supybot]% supybot-plugin-create
|
|
What should the name of the plugin be? Random
|
|
|
|
Sometimes you'll want a callback to be threaded. If its methods
|
|
(command or regexp-based, either one) will take a significant amount
|
|
of time to run, you'll want to thread them so they don't block the
|
|
entire bot.
|
|
|
|
Does your plugin need to be threaded? [y/n] n
|
|
|
|
What is your real name, so I can fill in the copyright and license
|
|
appropriately? Daniel DiPaolo
|
|
|
|
Your new plugin template is in the Random directory.
|
|
|
|
It's that simple! Well, that part of making the minimal plugin is that simple.
|
|
You should now have a directory with a few files in it, so let's take a look at
|
|
each of those files and see what they're used for.
|
|
|
|
README.txt
|
|
==========
|
|
Tell me about the plugin.
|
|
|
|
In README.txt you put exactly what the boilerplate text says to put in there:
|
|
|
|
Insert a description of your plugin here, with any notes, etc. about
|
|
using it.
|
|
|
|
A brief overview of exactly what the purpose of the plugin is supposed to do is
|
|
really all that is needed here. Also, if this plugin requires any third-party
|
|
Python modules, you should definitely mention those here. You don't have to
|
|
describe individual commands or anything like that, as those are defined within
|
|
the plugin code itself as you'll see later. You also don't need to acknowledge
|
|
any of the developers of the plugin as those too are handled elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
For our Random plugin, let's make README.txt say this:
|
|
|
|
This plugin contains commands relating to random numbers, and
|
|
includes: a simple random number generator, the ability to pick a
|
|
random number from within a range, a command for returning a random
|
|
sampling from a list of items, and a simple dice roller.
|
|
|
|
And now you know what's in store for the rest of this tutorial, we'll be
|
|
writing all of that in one Supybot plugin, and you'll be surprised at just how
|
|
simple it is!
|
|
|
|
__init__.py
|
|
===========
|
|
Plugin properties and a few other bits.
|
|
|
|
The next file we'll look at is __init__.py. If you're familiar with the Python
|
|
import mechanism, you'll know what this file is for. If you're not, think of it
|
|
as sort of the "glue" file that pulls all the files in this directory together
|
|
when you load the plugin. It's also where there are a few administrative items
|
|
live that you really need to maintain.
|
|
|
|
Let's go through the file. For the first 30 lines or so, you'll see the
|
|
copyright notice that we use for our plugins, only with your name in place (as
|
|
prompted in 'supybot-plugin-create'). Feel free to use whatever license you
|
|
choose, we don't feel particularly attached to the boilerplate code so it's
|
|
yours to license as you see fit even if you don't modify it. For our example,
|
|
we'll leave it as is.
|
|
|
|
The plugin docstring immediately follows the copyright notice and it (like
|
|
README.txt) tells you precisely what it should contain:
|
|
|
|
Add a description of the plugin (to be presented to the user inside
|
|
the wizard) here. This should describe *what* the plugin does.
|
|
|
|
The "wizard" that it speaks of is the 'supybot-wizard' script that is used to
|
|
create working Supybot config file. I imagine that in meeting the prerequisite
|
|
of "using a Supybot" first, most readers will have already encountered this
|
|
script. Basically, if the user selects to look at this plugin from the list of
|
|
plugins to load, it prints out that description to let the user know what it
|
|
does, so make sure to be clear on what the purpose of the plugin is. This
|
|
should be an abbreviated version of what we put in our README.txt, so let's put
|
|
this:
|
|
|
|
Provides a number of commands for selecting random things.
|
|
|
|
Next in __init__.py you see a few imports which are necessary, and then four
|
|
attributes that you need to modify for your bot and preferably keep up with as
|
|
you develop it: __version__, __author__, __contributors__, __url__.
|
|
|
|
__version__ is just a version string representing the current working version
|
|
of the plugin, and can be anything you want. If you use some sort of RCS, this
|
|
would be a good place to have it automatically increment the version string for
|
|
any time you edit any of the files in this directory. We'll just make ours
|
|
"0.1".
|
|
|
|
__author__ should be an instance of the supybot.Author class. A supybot.Author
|
|
is simply created by giving it a full name, a short name (preferably IRC nick),
|
|
and an e-mail address (all of these are optional, though at least the second
|
|
one is expected). So, for example, to create my Author user (though I get to
|
|
cheat and use supybot.authors.strike since I'm a main dev, muahaha), I would
|
|
do:
|
|
|
|
__author__ = supybot.Author('Daniel DiPaolo', 'Strike',
|
|
'somewhere@someplace.xxx')
|
|
|
|
Keep this in mind as we get to the next item...
|
|
|
|
__contributors__ is a dictionary mapping supybot.Author instances to lists of
|
|
things they contributed. If someone adds a command named foo to your plugin,
|
|
the list for that author should be ["foo"], or perhaps even ["added foo
|
|
command"]. The main author shouldn't be referenced here, as it is assumed that
|
|
everything that wasn't contributed by someone else was done by the main author.
|
|
For now we have no contributors, so we'll leave it blank.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, the __url__ attribute should just reference the download URL for the
|
|
plugin. We encourage you to use the supybot.com website for distributing
|
|
plugins and have gone to great lengths to make distributing them nice and easy
|
|
to do so. Since this is just an example, we'll leave this blank, but
|
|
supybot-plugin-create shows an example URL of a plugin home here on supybot.com
|
|
|
|
The rest of __init__.py really shouldn't be touched unless you are using
|
|
third-party modules in your plugin. If you are, then you need to take special
|
|
note of the section that looks like this:
|
|
|
|
import config
|
|
import plugin
|
|
reload(plugin) # In case we're being reloaded.
|
|
# Add more reloads here if you add third-party modules and want them
|
|
# to be reloaded when this plugin is reloaded. Don't forget to
|
|
# import them as well!
|
|
|
|
As the comment says, this is one place where you need to make sure you import
|
|
the third-party modules, and that you call reload() on them as well. That way,
|
|
if we are reloading a plugin on a running bot it will actually reload the
|
|
latest code. We aren't using any third-party modules, so we can just leave this
|
|
bit alone.
|
|
|
|
We're almost through the "boring" part and into the guts of writing Supybot
|
|
plugins, let's take a look at the next file.
|
|
|
|
config.py
|
|
=========
|
|
Making our plugin configurable
|
|
|
|
config.py is, unsurprisingly, where all the configuration stuff related to
|
|
your plugin goes. If you're not familiar with Supybot's configuration system,
|
|
I recommend reading the config tutorial before going any further with this
|
|
section.
|
|
|
|
So, let's plow through config.py line-by-line like we did the other files.
|
|
|
|
Once again, at the top is the standard copyright notice. Again, change it to
|
|
how you see fit.
|
|
|
|
Then, some standard imports which are necessary.
|
|
|
|
Now, the first peculiar thing we get to is the configure function. This
|
|
function is what is called by the supybot-wizard whenever a plugin is selected
|
|
to be loaded. Since you've used the bot by now (as stated on the first page of
|
|
this tutorial as a prerequisite), you've seen what this script does to
|
|
configure plugins. The wizard allows the bot owner to choose something
|
|
different from the default plugin config values without having to do it through
|
|
the bot (which is still not difficult, but not as easy as this). Also, note
|
|
that the advanced argument allows you to differentiate whether or not the
|
|
person configuring this plugin considers himself an advanced Supybot user. Our
|
|
plugin has no advanced features, so we won't be using it.
|
|
|
|
So, what exactly do we do in this configure function for our plugin? Well, for
|
|
the most part we ask questions and we set configuration values. You'll notice
|
|
the import line with supybot.questions in it. That provides some nice
|
|
convenience functions which are used to (you guessed it) ask questions. The
|
|
other line in there is the conf.registerPlugin line which registers our plugin
|
|
with the config and allows us to create configuration values for the plugin.
|
|
You should leave these two lines in even if you don't have anything else to put
|
|
in here. For the vast majority of plugins, you can leave this part as is, so we
|
|
won't go over how to write plugin configuration functions here (that will be
|
|
handled in a separate article). Our plugin won't be using much configuration,
|
|
so we'll leave this as is.
|
|
|
|
Next, you'll see a line that looks very similar to the one in the configure
|
|
function. This line is used not only to register the plugin prior to being
|
|
called in configure, but also to store a bit of an alias to the plugin's config
|
|
group to make things shorter later on. So, this line should read:
|
|
|
|
Random = conf.registerPlugin('Random')
|
|
|
|
Now we get to the part where we define all the configuration groups and
|
|
variables that our plugin is to have. Again, many plugins won't require any
|
|
configuration so we won't go over it here, but in a separate article dedicated
|
|
to sprucing up your config.py for more advanced plugins. Our plugin doesn't
|
|
require any config variables, so we actually don't need to make any changes to
|
|
this file at all.
|
|
|
|
Configuration of plugins is handled in depth at the Advanced Plugin Config
|
|
Tutorial
|
|
|
|
plugin.py
|
|
=========
|
|
The meat of the plugin
|
|
|
|
Here's the moment you've been waiting for, the overview of plugin.py and how to
|
|
make our plugin actually do stuff.
|
|
|
|
At the top, same as always, is the standard copyright block to be used and
|
|
abused at your leisure.
|
|
|
|
Next, some standard imports. Not all of them are used at the moment, but you
|
|
probably will use many (if not most) of them, so just let them be. Since
|
|
we'll be making use of Python's standard 'random' module, you'll need to add
|
|
the following line to the list of imports::
|
|
|
|
import random
|
|
|
|
Now, the plugin class itself. What you're given is a skeleton: a simple
|
|
subclass of callbacks.Plugin for you to start with. The only real content it
|
|
has is the boilerplate docstring, which you should modify to reflect what the
|
|
boilerplate text says - it should be useful so that when someone uses the
|
|
plugin help command to determine how to use this plugin, they'll know what they
|
|
need to do. Ours will read something like:
|
|
|
|
"""This plugin provides a few random number commands and some
|
|
commands for getting random samples. Use the "seed" command to seed
|
|
the plugin's random number generator if you like, though it is
|
|
unnecessary as it gets seeded upon loading of the plugin. The
|
|
"random" command is most likely what you're looking for, though
|
|
there are a number of other useful commands in this plugin. Use
|
|
'list random' to check them out. """
|
|
|
|
It's basically a "guide to getting started" for the plugin. Now, to make the
|
|
plugin do something. First of all, to get any random numbers we're going to
|
|
need a random number generator (RNG). Pretty much everything in our plugin is
|
|
going to use it, so we'll define it in the constructor of our plugin, __init__.
|
|
Here we'll also seed it with the current time (standard practice for RNGs).
|
|
Here's what our __init__ looks like:
|
|
|
|
def __init__(self, irc):
|
|
self.__parent = super(Random, self)
|
|
self.__parent.__init__(irc)
|
|
self.rng = random.Random() # create our rng
|
|
self.rng.seed() # automatically seeds with current time
|
|
|
|
Now, the first two lines may look a little daunting, but it's just
|
|
administrative stuff required if you want to use a custom __init__. If we
|
|
didn't want to do so, we wouldn't have to, but it's not uncommon so I decided
|
|
to use an example plugin that did. For the most part you can just copy/paste
|
|
those lines into any plugin you override the __init__ for and just change them
|
|
to use the plugin name that you are working on instead.
|
|
|
|
So, now we have a RNG in our plugin, let's write a command to get a random
|
|
number. We'll start with a simple command named random that just returns a
|
|
random number from our RNG and takes no arguments. Here's what that looks like:
|
|
|
|
def random(self, irc, msg, args):
|
|
"""takes no arguments
|
|
|
|
Returns the next random number from the random number generator.
|
|
"""
|
|
irc.reply(str(self.rng.random()))
|
|
random = wrap(random)
|
|
|
|
And that's it. Now here are the important points.
|
|
|
|
First and foremost, all plugin commands must have all-lowercase function
|
|
names. If they aren't all lowercase they won't show up in a plugin's list of
|
|
commands (nor will they be useable in general). If you look through a plugin
|
|
and see a function that's not in all lowercase, it is not a plugin command.
|
|
Chances are it is a helper function of some sort, and in fact using capital
|
|
letters is a good way of assuring that you don't accidentally expose helper
|
|
functions to users as commands.
|
|
|
|
You'll note the arguments to this class method are (self, irc, msg, args). This
|
|
is what the argument list for all methods that are to be used as commands must
|
|
start with. If you wanted additional arguments, you'd append them onto the end,
|
|
but since we take no arguments we just stop there. I'll explain this in more
|
|
detail with our next command, but it is very important that all plugin commands
|
|
are class methods that start with those four arguments exactly as named.
|
|
|
|
Next, in the docstring there are two major components. First, the very first
|
|
line dictates the argument list to be displayed when someone calls the help
|
|
command for this command (i.e., help random). Then you leave a blank line and
|
|
start the actual help string for the function. Don't worry about the fact that
|
|
it's tabbed in or anything like that, as the help command normalizes it to
|
|
make it look nice. This part should be fairly brief but sufficient to explain
|
|
the function and what (if any) arguments it requires. Remember that this should
|
|
fit in one IRC message which is typically around a 450 character limit.
|
|
|
|
Then we have the actual code body of the plugin, which consists of a single
|
|
line: irc.reply(str(self.rng.random())). The irc.reply function issues a reply
|
|
to wherever the PRIVMSG it received the command from with whatever text is
|
|
provided. If you're not sure what I mean when I say "wherever the PRIVMSG it
|
|
received the command from", basically it means: if the command is issued in a
|
|
channel the response is sent in the channel, and if the command is issued in a
|
|
private dialog the response is sent in a private dialog. The text we want to
|
|
display is simply the next number from our RNG (self.rng). We get that number
|
|
by calling the random function, and then we str it just to make sure it is a
|
|
nice printable string.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, all plugin commands must be 'wrap'ed. What the wrap function does is
|
|
handle argument parsing for plugin commands in a very nice and very powerful
|
|
way. With no arguments, we simply need to just wrap it. For more in-depth
|
|
information on using wrap check out the wrap tutorial (The astute Python
|
|
programmer may note that this is very much like a decorator, and that's
|
|
precisely what it is. However rather than use the @decorator syntax from Python
|
|
2.4 we elect to stick with this syntax to remain compatible with Python 2.3.)
|
|
|
|
Now let's create a command with some arguments and see how we use those in our
|
|
plugin commands. Let's allow the user to seed our RNG with their own seed
|
|
value. We'll call the command seed and take just the seed value as the argument
|
|
(which we'll require be a floating point value of some sort, though technically
|
|
it can be any hashable object). Here's what this command looks like:
|
|
|
|
def seed(self, irc, msg, args, seed):
|
|
"""<seed>
|
|
|
|
Sets the internal RNG's seed value to <seed>. <seed> must be a
|
|
floating point number.
|
|
"""
|
|
self.rng.seed(seed)
|
|
irc.replySuccess()
|
|
seed = wrap(seed, ['float'])
|
|
|
|
You'll notice first that argument list now includes an extra argument, seed. If
|
|
you read the wrap tutorial mentioned above, you should understand how this arg
|
|
list gets populated with values. Thanks to wrap we don't have to worry about
|
|
type-checking or value-checking or anything like that. We just specify that it
|
|
must be a float in the wrap portion and we can use it in the body of the
|
|
function.
|
|
|
|
Of course, we modify the docstring to document this function. Note the syntax
|
|
on the first line. Arguments go in <> and optional arguments should be
|
|
surrounded by [] (we'll demonstrate this later as well).
|
|
|
|
The body of the function should be fairly straightforward to figure out, but it
|
|
introduces a new function - irc.replySuccess. This is just a generic "I
|
|
succeeded" command which responds with whatever the bot owner has configured to
|
|
be the success response (configured in supybot.replies.success). Note that we
|
|
don't do any error-checking in the plugin, and that's because we simply don't
|
|
have to. We are guaranteed that seed will be a float and so the call to our
|
|
RNG's seed is guaranteed to work.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, of course, the wrap call. Again, read the wrap tutorial for fuller
|
|
coverage of its use, but the basic premise is that the second argument to wrap
|
|
is a list of converters that handles argument validation and conversion and it
|
|
then assigns values to each argument in the arg list after the first four
|
|
(required) arguments. So, our seed argument gets a float, guaranteed.
|
|
|
|
With this alone you'd be able to make some pretty usable plugin commands, but
|
|
we'll go through two more commands to introduce a few more useful ideas. The
|
|
next command we'll make is a sample command which gets a random sample of items
|
|
from a list provided by the user:
|
|
|
|
def sample(self, irc, msg, args, n, items):
|
|
"""<number of items> <item1> [<item2> ...]
|
|
|
|
Returns a sample of the <number of items> taken from the remaining
|
|
arguments. Obviously <number of items> must be less than the number
|
|
of arguments given.
|
|
"""
|
|
if n > len(items):
|
|
irc.error('<number of items> must be less than the number '
|
|
'of arguments.')
|
|
return
|
|
sample = self.rng.sample(items, n)
|
|
sample.sort()
|
|
irc.reply(utils.str.commaAndify(sample))
|
|
sample = wrap(sample, ['int', many('anything')])
|
|
|
|
This plugin command introduces a few new things, but the general structure
|
|
should look fairly familiar by now. You may wonder why we only have two extra
|
|
arguments when obviously this plugin can accept any number of arguments. Well,
|
|
using wrap we collect all of the remaining arguments after the first one into
|
|
the items argument. If you haven't caught on yet, wrap is really cool and
|
|
extremely useful.
|
|
|
|
Next of course is the updated docstring. Note the use of [] to denote the
|
|
optional items after the first item.
|
|
|
|
The body of the plugin should be relatively easy to read. First we check and
|
|
make sure that n (the number of items the user wants to sample) is not larger
|
|
than the actual number of items they gave. If it does, we call irc.error with
|
|
the error message you see. irc.error is kind of like irc.replySuccess only it
|
|
gives an error message using the configured error format (in
|
|
supybot.replies.error). Otherwise, we use the sample function from our RNG to
|
|
get a sample, then we sort it, and we reply with the 'utils.str.commaAndify'ed
|
|
version. The utils.str.commaAndify function basically takes a list of strings
|
|
and turns it into "item1, item2, item3, item4, and item5" for an arbitrary
|
|
length. More details on using the utils module can be found in the utils
|
|
tutorial.
|
|
|
|
Now for the last command that we will add to our plugin.py. This last command
|
|
will allow the bot users to roll an arbitrary n-sided die, with as many sides
|
|
as they so choose. Here's the code for this command:
|
|
|
|
def diceroll(self, irc, msg, args, n):
|
|
"""[<number of sides>]
|
|
|
|
Rolls a die with <number of sides> sides. The default number of sides
|
|
is 6.
|
|
"""
|
|
s = 'rolls a %s' % self.rng.randrange(1, n)
|
|
irc.reply(s, action=True)
|
|
diceroll = wrap(diceroll, [additional(('int', 'number of sides'), 6)])
|
|
|
|
The only new thing learned here really is that the irc.reply method accepts an
|
|
optional argument action, which if set to True makes the reply an action
|
|
instead. So instead of just crudely responding with the number, instead you
|
|
should see something like * supybot rolls a 5. You'll also note that it uses a
|
|
more advanced wrap line than we have used to this point, but to learn more
|
|
about wrap, you should refer to the wrap tutorial
|
|
|
|
And now that we're done adding plugin commands you should see the boilerplate
|
|
stuff at the bottom, which just consists of:
|
|
|
|
Class = Random
|
|
|
|
And also some vim modeline stuff. Leave these as is, and we're finally done
|
|
with plugin.py!
|
|
|
|
test.py
|
|
=======
|
|
Plugin tests go here.
|
|
|
|
Now that we've gotten our plugin written, we want to make sure it works. Sure,
|
|
an easy way to do a somewhat quick check is to start up a bot, load the plugin,
|
|
and run a few commands on it. If all goes well there, everything's probably
|
|
okay. But, we can do better than "probably okay". This is where written plugin
|
|
tests come in. We can write tests that not only assure that the plugin loads
|
|
and runs the commands fine, but also that it produces the expected output for
|
|
given inputs. And not only that, we can use the nifty supybot-test script to
|
|
test the plugin without even having to have a network connection to connect to
|
|
IRC with and most certainly without running a local IRC server.
|
|
|
|
The boilerplate code for test.py is a good start. It imports everything you
|
|
need and sets up RandomTestCase which will contain all of our tests. Now we
|
|
just need to write some test methods. I'll be moving fairly quickly here just
|
|
going over very basic concepts and glossing over details, but the full plugin
|
|
test authoring tutorial has much more detail to it and is recommended reading
|
|
after finishing this tutorial.
|
|
|
|
Since we have four commands we should have at least four test methods in our
|
|
test case class. Typically you name the test methods that simply checks that a
|
|
given command works by just appending the command name to test. So, we'll have
|
|
testRandom, testSeed, testSample, and testDiceRoll. Any other methods you want
|
|
to add are more free-form and should describe what you're testing (don't be
|
|
afraid to use long names).
|
|
|
|
First we'll write the testRandom method:
|
|
|
|
def testRandom(self):
|
|
# difficult to test, let's just make sure it works
|
|
self.assertNotError('random')
|
|
|
|
Since we can't predict what the output of our random number generator is going
|
|
to be, it's hard to specify a response we want. So instead, we just make sure
|
|
we don't get an error by calling the random command, and that's about all we
|
|
can do.
|
|
|
|
Next, testSeed. In this method we're just going to check that the command
|
|
itself functions. In another test method later on we will check and make sure
|
|
that the seed produces reproducible random numbers like we would hope it would,
|
|
but for now we just test it like we did random in 'testRandom':
|
|
|
|
def testSeed(self):
|
|
# just make sure it works
|
|
self.assertNotError('seed 20')
|
|
|
|
Now for testSample. Since this one takes more arguments it makes sense that we
|
|
test more scenarios in this one. Also this time we have to make sure that we
|
|
hit the error that we coded in there given the right conditions:
|
|
|
|
def testSample(self):
|
|
self.assertError('sample 20 foo')
|
|
self.assertResponse('sample 1 foo', 'foo')
|
|
self.assertRegexp('sample 2 foo bar', '... and ...')
|
|
self.assertRegexp('sample 3 foo bar baz', '..., ..., and ...')
|
|
|
|
So first we check and make sure trying to take a 20-element sample of a
|
|
1-element list gives us an error. Next we just check and make sure we get the
|
|
right number of elements and that they are formatted correctly when we give 1,
|
|
2, or 3 element lists.
|
|
|
|
And for the last of our basic "check to see that it works" functions,
|
|
testDiceRoll:
|
|
|
|
def testDiceRoll(self):
|
|
self.assertActionRegexp('diceroll', 'rolls a \d')
|
|
|
|
We know that diceroll should return an action, and that with no arguments it
|
|
should roll a single-digit number. And that's about all we can test reliably
|
|
here, so that's all we do.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, we wanted to check and make sure that seeding the RNG with seed
|
|
actually took effect like it's supposed to. So, we write another test method:
|
|
|
|
def testSeedActuallySeeds(self):
|
|
# now to make sure things work repeatably
|
|
self.assertNotError('seed 20')
|
|
m1 = self.getMsg('random')
|
|
self.assertNotError('seed 20')
|
|
m2 = self.getMsg('random')
|
|
self.failUnlessEqual(m1, m2)
|
|
m3 = self.getMsg('random')
|
|
self.failIfEqual(m2, m3)
|
|
|
|
So we seed the RNG with 20, store the message, and then seed it at 20 again. We
|
|
grab that message, and unless they are the same number when we compare the two,
|
|
we fail. And then just to make sure our RNG is producing random numbers, we get
|
|
another random number and make sure it is distinct from the prior one.
|
|
|
|
Conclusion
|
|
==========
|
|
Now you're ready to write Supybot plugins!
|
|
|
|
You are now very well-prepared to write Supybot plugins. Now for a few words of
|
|
wisdom with regards to Supybot plugin-writing.
|
|
|
|
* Read other people's plugins, especially the included plugins and ones by
|
|
the core developers. We (the Supybot dev team) can't possibly document
|
|
all the awesome things that Supybot plugins can do, but we try.
|
|
Nevertheless there are some really cool things that can be done that
|
|
aren't very well-documented on this site.
|
|
|
|
* Hack new functionality into existing plugins first if writing a new
|
|
plugin is too daunting.
|
|
|
|
* Come ask us questions in #supybot on Freenode or OFTC. Going back to the
|
|
first point above, the developers themselves can help you even more than
|
|
the docs can (though we prefer you read the docs first).
|
|
|
|
* Publish your plugins on our website. We made some custom stuff on the
|
|
website just to cater to publishing plugins. Use it, share your plugins
|
|
with the world and make Supybot all that more attractive for other users
|
|
so they will want to write their plugins for Supybot as well.
|
|
|
|
* Read, read, read all the documentation on our website. I just spent a
|
|
lot of time getting a bunch of these tutorials out and getting things up
|
|
to date, so while Supybot documentation in the past hasn't been stellar,
|
|
it certainly is very good now.
|
|
|
|
* And of course, have fun writing your plugins.
|