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545 lines
25 KiB
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545 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
Ok, so you want to write a callback for supybot. Good, then this is
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the place to be. We're going to start from the top (the highest
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level, where supybot code does the most work for you) and move lower
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after that.
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So have you used supybot? If not, you need to go use it, get a feel
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for it, see how the various commands work and such.
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So now that we know you've used supybot, we'll start getting into
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details.
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First, the easiest way to start writing a module is to use the wizard
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provided, scripts/newplugin.py. Here's an example session:
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-----
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functor% scripts/newplugin.py
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What should the name of the plugin be? Random
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Supybot offers two major types of plugins: command-based and regexp-
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based. Command-based plugins are the kind of plugins you've seen most
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when you've used supybot. They're also the most featureful and
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easiest to write. Commands can be nested, for instance, whereas
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regexp-based callbacks can't do nesting. That doesn't mean that
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you'll never want regexp-based callbacks. They offer a flexibility
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that command-based callbacks don't offer; however, they don't tie into
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the whole system as well. If you need to combine a command-based
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callback with some regexp-based methods, you can do so by subclassing
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callbacks.PrivmsgCommandAndRegexp and then adding a class-level
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attribute "regexps" that is a sets.Set of methods that are regexp-
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based. But you'll have to do that yourself after this wizard is
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finished :)
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Do you want a command-based plugin or a regexp-based plugin? [command/
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regexp] command
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Sometimes you'll want a callback to be threaded. If its methods
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(command or regexp-based, either one) will take a signficant amount
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of time to run, you'll want to thread them so they don't block
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the entire bot.
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Does your plugin need to be threaded? [y/n] n
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Your new plugin template is in plugins/Random.py
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functor%
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-----
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So that's what it looks like. Now let's look at the source code (if
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you'd like to look at it in your programming editor, the whole plugin
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is available as examples/Random.py):
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-----
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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###
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# Copyright (c) 2002, Jeremiah Fincher
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# All rights reserved.
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#
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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#
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# * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
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# this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer.
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# * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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# this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer in the
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# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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# * Neither the name of the author of this software nor the name of
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# contributors to this software may be used to endorse or promote products
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# derived from this software without specific prior written consent.
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#
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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# AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
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# LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
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# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
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# SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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# INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
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# CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
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# ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
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# POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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###
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"""
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Add the module docstring here. This will be used by the setup.py script.
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"""
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from baseplugin import *
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import utils
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import privmsgs
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import callbacks
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def configure(onStart, afterConnect, advanced):
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# This will be called by setup.py to configure this module. onStart and
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# afterConnect are both lists. Append to onStart the commands you would
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# like to be run when the bot is started; append to afterConnect the
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# commands you would like to be run when the bot has finished connecting.
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from questions import expect, anything, something, yn
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onStart.append('load Random')
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example = utils.wrapLines("""
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Add an example IRC session using this module here.
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""")
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class Random(callbacks.Privmsg):
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pass
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Class = Random
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# vim:set shiftwidth=4 tabstop=8 expandtab textwidth=78:
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-----
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So a few notes, before we customize it.
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You'll probably want to change the copyright notice to be your name.
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It wouldn't stick even if you kept my name, so you might as well :)
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Describe what you want the plugin to do in the docstring. This is
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used in scripts/setup.py in order to explain to the user the purpose
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of the module. It's also returned when someone asks the bot for help
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for a given module (instead of help for a certain command). We'll
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change this one to "Lots of stuff relating to random numbers."
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Then there are the imports. The utils module is used (in example,
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which we'll see later). The callbacks module is used (the class
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you're given subclasses callbacks.Privmsg) but the privmsgs module
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isn't used. That's alright; we can almost guarantee you'll use it, so
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we go ahead and add the import to the template.
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Then you see a "configure" function. This the function that's called
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when users decide to add your module in scripts/setup.py. You'll note
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that by default it simply adds "load Example" (where 'Example' is the name you
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provided as the name of your plugin, so in our case it is "load Random") at
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the bottom. For many plugins this is all you need; for more complex plugins,
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you might need to ask questions and add commands based on the answers.
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Then there's an example string. It's simply an example of usage of
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the plugin in practice. scripts/setup.py offers to show the user an
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example of the module usage; this is what it shows them. You'll note
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that it's wrapped for you in utils.wrapLines so you don't have to
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bother with it; just paste a session directly out of your IRC client
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and you'll be set.
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Now comes the meat of the plugin: the plugin class.
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What you're given is a skeleton: a simple subclass of
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callbacks.Privmsg for you to start with. Now let's add a command.
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I don't know what you know about random number generators, but the
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short of it is that they start at a certain number (a seed) and they
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continue (via some somewhat complicated/unpredictable algorithm) from
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there. This seed (and the rest of the sequence, really) is all nice
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and packaged up in Python's random module, the Random object. So the
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first thing we're going to have to do is give our plugin a Random
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object.
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Normally, when we want to give instances of a class an object, we'll
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do so in the __init__ method. And that works great for plugins, too.
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The one thing you have to be careful of is that you call the
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superclass __init__ method at the end of your own __init__. So to add
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this random.Random object to our plugin, we can replace the "pass"
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statement with this:
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def __init__(self):
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self.rng = random.Random()
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callbacks.Privmsg.__init__(self)
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(rng is an abbreviation for "random number generator," in case you
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were curious)
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Do be careful not to give your __init__ any arguments (other than
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self, of course). There's no way anything will ever get to them! If
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you have some sort of initial values you need to get to your plugin
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before it can do anything interesting, add a command that gets those
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values. By convention, those commands begin with "start" -- check out
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the Relay and Enforcer plugins for examples of such commands.
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There's an easier way to get our plugin to have its own rng than to
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define an __init__. Plugins are unique among classes because we're
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always certain that there will only be one instance -- supybot doesn't
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allow us to load multiple instances of a single plugin. So instead of
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adding the rng in __init__, we can just add it as a attribute to the
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class itself. Like so (replacing the "pass" statement again):
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rng = random.Random()
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And we save two lines of code and make our code a little more clear :)
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Now that we have an RNG, we need some way to get random numbers. So
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first, we'll add a command that simply gets the next random number and
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gives it back to the user. It takes no arguments, of course (what
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would you give it?). Here's the command, and I'll follow that with the
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explanation of what each part means.
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def random(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""takes no arguments
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Returns the next random number generated by the random number
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generator.
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"""
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irc.reply(msg, str(self.rng.random()))
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And that's it! Pretty simple, huh? Anyway, you're probably wondering
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what all that *means*. We'll start with the def statement:
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def random(self, irc, msg, args):
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What that does is define a command "random". You can call it by
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saying "@random" (or whatever prefix character your specific bot
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uses). The arguments are a bit less obvious. Self is self-evident
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(hah!). irc is the Irc object passed to the command; msg is the
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original IrcMsg object. But you're really not going to have to deal
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with either of these too much (with the exception of calling irc.reply
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or irc.error). What you're *really* interested in is the args arg.
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That if a list of all the arguments passed to your command, pre-parsed
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and already evaluated (i.e., you never have to worry about nested
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commands, or handling double quoted strings, or splitting on
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whitespace -- the work has already been done for you). You can read
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about the Irc object in irclib.py (you won't find .reply or .error
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there, though, because you're actually getting an IrcObjectProxy, but
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that's beyond the level we want to describe here :)). You can read
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about the msg object in ircmsgs.py. But again, aside from calling
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irc.reply or irc.error, you'll very rarely be using these objects.
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(In case you're curious, the answer is yes, you *must* name your
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arguments (self, irc, msg, args). The names of those arguments is one
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of the ways that supybot uses to determine which methods in a plugin
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class are commands and which aren't. And while we're talking about
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naming restrictions, all your commands should be named in
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all-lowercase with no underscores. Before calling a command, supybot
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always converts the command name to lowercase and removes all dashes
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and underscores. On the other hand, you now know an easy way to make
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sure a method is never called (even if its arguments are (self, irc,
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msg, args), however unlikely that may be). Just name it with an
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underscore or an uppercase letter in it :))
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You'll also note that the docstring is odd. The wonderful thing about
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the supybot framework is that it's easy to write complete commands
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with help and everything: the docstring *IS* the help! Given the
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above docstring, this is what a supybot does:
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<angryman> jemfinch: random takes no arguments (for more help
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use the morehelp command)
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<jemfinch> $morehelp random
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<angryman> jemfinch: Returns the next random number from the
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current random number generator.
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'help <command>' replies with the command name followed by the first line of
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the command's docstring; there should be a blank line following, and then
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'morehelp <command>' will reply with the remainder of the docstring. So that
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explains the docstring. Now on to the actual body of the function:
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irc.reply(msg, str(self.rng.random()))
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irc.reply takes two arguments, an IrcMsg (like the one passed into
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your function) and a string. The IrcMsg is used to determine who the
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reply should go to and whether or not it should be sent in private
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message (commands sent in private are replied to in private). The
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string is the reply to be sent. Don't worry about length restrictions
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or anything -- if the string you want to send is too big for an IRC
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message (and oftentimes that turns out to be the case :)) the supybot
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framework handles that entirely transparently to you. Do make sure,
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however, that you give irc.reply a string. It doesn't take anything
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else (sometimes even unicode fails!). That's why we have
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"str(self.rnd.random())" instead of simply "self.rng.random()" -- we
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had to give irc.reply a string.
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Anyway, now that we have an RNG, we have a need for seed! Of course,
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Python gives us a good seed already (it uses the current time as a
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seed if we don't give it one) but users might want to be able to
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repeat "random" sequences, so letting them set the seed is a good
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thing. So we'll add a seed command to give the RNG a specific seed:
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def seed(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""<seed>
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Sets the seed of the random number generator. <seed> must be
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an int or a long.
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"""
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seed = privmsgs.getArgs(args)
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try:
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seed = long(seed)
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except ValueError:
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# It wasn't a valid long!
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irc.error(msg, '<seed> must be a valid int or long.')
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return
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self.rng.seed(seed)
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irc.reply(msg, conf.replySuccess)
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So this one's a bit more complicated. But it's still pretty simple.
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The method name is "seed" so that'll be the command name. The
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arguments are the same, the docstring is of the same form, so we don't
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need to go over that again. The body of the function, however, is
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significantly different.
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privmsgs.getArgs is a function you're going to be seeing a lot of when
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you write plugins for supybot. What it does is basically give you the
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right number of arguments for your comamnd. In this case, we want one
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argument. But we might have been given any number of arguments by the
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user. So privmsgs.getArgs joins them appropriately, leaving us with
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one single "seed" argument (by default, it returns one argument as a
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single value; more arguments are returned in a tuple/list). Yes, we
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could've just said "seed = args[0]" and gotten the first argument, but
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what if the user didn't pass us an argument at all? Then we've got to
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catch the IndexError from args[0] and complain to the user about it.
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privmsgs.getArgs, on the other hand, handles all that for us. If the
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user didn't give us enough arguments, it'll reply with the help string
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for the command, thus saving us the effort.
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So we have the seed from privmsgs.getArgs. But it's a string. The
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next three lines is pretty darn obvious: we're just converting the
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string to a int of some sort. But if it's not, that's when we're
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going to call irc.error. It has the same interface as we saw before
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in irc.reply, but it makes sure to remind the user that an error has
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been encountered (currently, that means it puts "Error: " at the
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beginning of the message). After erroring, we return. It's important
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to remember this return here; otherwise, we'll just keep going down
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through the function and try to use this "seed" variable that never
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got assigned. A good general rule of thumb is that any time you use
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irc.error, you'll want to return immediately afterwards.
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Then we set the seed -- that's a simple function on our rng object.
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Assuming that succeeds (and doesn't raise an exception, which it
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shouldn't, because we already read the documentation and know that it
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should work) we reply to say that everything worked fine. That's what
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conf.replySuccess says. By default, it has the very dry (and
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appropriately robot-like) "The operation succeeded." but you're
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perfectly welcome to customize it yourself -- conf.py was written to
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be modified!
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So that's a bit more complicated command. But we still haven't dealt
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with multiple arguments. Let's do that next.
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So these random numbers are useful, but they're not the kind of random
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numbers we usually want in Real Life. In Real Life, we like to tell
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someone to "pick a number between 1 and 10." So let's write a
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function that does that. Of course, we won't hardcode the 1 or the 10
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into the function, but we'll take them as arguments. First the
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function:
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def range(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""<start> <end>
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Returns a number between <start> and <end>, inclusive (i.e., the number
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can be either of the endpoints.
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"""
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(start, end) = privmsgs.getArgs(args, needed=2)
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try:
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end = int(end)
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start = int(start)
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except ValueError:
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irc.error(msg, '<start> and <end> must both be integers.')
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return
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# .randrange() doesn't include the endpoint, so we use end+1.
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irc.reply(msg, str(self.rng.randrange(start, end+1)))
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Pretty simple. This is becoming old hat by now. The only new thing
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here is the call to privmsgs.getArgs. We have to make sure, since we
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want two values, to pass a keyword parameter "needed" into
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privmsgs.getArgs. Of course, privmsgs.getArgs handles all the
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checking for missing arguments and whatnot so we don't have to.
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The Random object we're using offers us a "sample" method that takes a
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sequence and a number (we'll call it N) and returns a list of N items
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taken randomly from the sequence. So I'll show you an example that
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takes advantage of multiple arguments but doesn't use
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privmsgs.getArgs (and thus has to handle its own errors if the number
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of arguments isn't right). Here's the code:
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def sample(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""<number of items> [<text> ...]
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Returns a sample of the <number of items> taken from the remaining
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arguments. Obviously <number of items> must be less than the number
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of arguments given.
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"""
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try:
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n = int(args.pop(0))
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except IndexError: # raised by .pop(0)
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raise callbacks.ArgumentError
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except ValueError:
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irc.error(msg, '<number of items> must be an integer.')
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return
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if n > len(args):
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irc.error(msg, '<number of items> must be less than the number '
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'of arguments.')
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return
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sample = self.rng.sample(args, n)
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irc.reply(msg, utils.commaAndify(map(repr, sample)))
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Most everything here is familiar. The difference between this and the
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previous examples is that we're dealing with args directly, rather
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than through getArgs. Since we already have the arguments in a list,
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it doesn't make any sense to have privmsgs.getArgs smush them all
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together into a big long string that we'll just have to re-split. But
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we still want the nice error handling of privmsgs.getArgs. So what do
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we do? We raise callbacks.ArgumentError! That's the secret juju
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that privmsgs.getArgs is doing; now we're just doing it ourself.
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Someone up our callchain knows how to handle it so a neat error
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message is returned. So in this function, if .pop(0) fails, we
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weren't given enough arguments and thus need to tell the user how to
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call us.
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So we have the args, we have the number, we do a simple call to
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random.sample and then we do this funky utils.commaAndify to it.
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Yeah, so I was running low on useful names :) Anyway, what it does is
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take a list of strings and return a string with them joined by a
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comma, the last one being joined with a comma and "and". So the list
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['foo', 'bar', 'baz'] becomes "foo, bar, and baz". It's pretty useful
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for showing the user lists in a useful form. We map the strings with
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repr() first just to surround them with quotes.
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So we have one more example. Yes, I hear your groans, but it's
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pedagogically useful :) This time we're going to write a command that
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makes the bot roll a die. It'll take one argument (the number of
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sides on the die) and will respond with the equivalent of "/me rolls a
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__" where __ is the number the bot rolled. So here's the code:
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def diceroll(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""[<number of sides>]
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Rolls a die with <number of sides> sides. The default number
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of sides is 6.
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"""
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try:
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n = privmsgs.getArgs(args, needed=0, optional=1)
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if not n:
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n = 6
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n = int(n)
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except ValueError:
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irc.error(msg, 'Dice have integer numbers of sides. Use one.')
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return
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s = 'rolls a %s' % self.rng.randrange(1, n+1)
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irc.queueMsg(ircmsgs.action(ircutils.replyTo(msg), s))
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raise callbacks.CannotNest
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There's a lot of stuff you haven't seen before in there. The most
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important, though, is the first thing you'll notice that's different:
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the privmsg.getArgs call. Here we're offering a default argument in
|
|
case the user is too lazy to supply one (or just wants a nice,
|
|
standard six-sided die :)) privmsgs.getArgs supports that; we'll just
|
|
tell it that we don't *need* any arguments (via needed=0) and that we
|
|
*might like* one argument (optional=1). If the user provides an
|
|
argument, we'll get it -- if they don't, we'll just get an empty
|
|
string. Hence the "if not n: n = 6", where we provide the default.
|
|
|
|
Later, though, you'll see something other than irc.reply. This is
|
|
irc.queueMsg, the general interface for sending messages to the
|
|
server. It's what irc.reply is using under the covers. It takes an
|
|
IrcMsg object. Fortunately, that's exactly what's returned by
|
|
ircmsgs.action. An action message, just in case you don't know, is a
|
|
/me kind of message. ircmsgs.action is a helper function that takes a
|
|
target (a place to send the message, either a channel or a person) and
|
|
a payload (the thing to /me) and returns the appropriate IrcMsg
|
|
object. ircutils.replyTo simply takes an IrcMsg and returns where we
|
|
should reply to; if the message was originally sent to a channel,
|
|
we'll reply to there, if it was originally sent to us privately, we'll
|
|
reply in private.
|
|
|
|
At the end, you might be surprised by the "raise callbacks.CannotNest".
|
|
That's used simply because at the moment you can't nest actions (just like
|
|
you can't nest anything that doesn't go through irc.reply). That raise just
|
|
makes sure the user finds this out if he tries to nest this like "@rot13
|
|
[diceroll]".
|
|
|
|
So that's our plugin. 5 commands, each building in complexity. You
|
|
should now be able to write most anything you want to do in Supybot.
|
|
Except regexp-based plugins, but that's a story for another day (and
|
|
those aren't nearly as cool as these command-based callbacks anyway
|
|
:)). Now we need to flesh it out to make it a full-fledged plugin.
|
|
|
|
Let's take a look at that configure function newplugin.py made for
|
|
us. Here it is, in case you've forgotten:
|
|
|
|
def configure(onStart, afterConnect, advanced):
|
|
# This will be called by setup.py to configure this module. onStart and
|
|
# afterConnect are both lists. Append to onStart the commands you would
|
|
# like to be run when the bot is started; append to afterConnect the
|
|
# commands you would like to be run when the bot has finished connecting.
|
|
from questions import expect, anything, something, yn
|
|
onStart.append('load Random')
|
|
|
|
You remember when you first started running supybot and ran
|
|
scripts/setup.py and it asked you all those questions? Well, now's
|
|
your chance to ask other users some questions of your own. In our
|
|
case, with our Random plugin, it might be nice to offer the user the
|
|
ability to specify a seed to use whenever the plugin is loaded. So
|
|
let's ask him if he wants to do that, and if so, let's ask him what
|
|
the seed should be.
|
|
|
|
def configure(onStart, afterConnect, advanced):
|
|
# This will be called by setup.py to configure this module. onStart and
|
|
# afterConnect are both lists. Append to onStart the commands you would
|
|
# like to be run when the bot is started; append to afterConnect the
|
|
# commands you would like to be run when the bot has finished connecting.
|
|
from questions import expect, anything, something, yn
|
|
onStart.append('load Random')
|
|
if yn('Do you want to specify a seed to be used for the RNG')=='y':
|
|
seed = something('What seed? It must be an int or long.')
|
|
while not seed.isdigit():
|
|
print 'That\'s not a valid seed.'
|
|
seed = something('What seed?')
|
|
onStart.append('seed %s' % seed)
|
|
|
|
As you can see, what the questions module does is fairly self-evident:
|
|
yn returns either 'y' or 'n'; something returns *something* (but not
|
|
nothing; for nothing, you'd want anything). So basically we ask some
|
|
questions until we get a good seed. Then we do this
|
|
"onStart.append('seed %s' % seed)" doohickey. onStart is a list of
|
|
the commands to run when the bot starts; we're just throwing our
|
|
little piece into it. These commands will then be written into the
|
|
template scripts/setup.py creates for the bot.
|
|
|
|
Now the only thing missing from our plugin is an example. Here, I'll
|
|
make one really quickly:
|
|
|
|
<jemfinch> $list Random
|
|
<angryman> diceroll, random, range, sample, seed
|
|
<jemfinch> $random
|
|
<angryman> 0.478084042957
|
|
<jemfinch> $random
|
|
<angryman> 0.960634332773
|
|
<jemfinch> $seed 50
|
|
<angryman> The operation succeeded.
|
|
<jemfinch> $random
|
|
<angryman> 0.497536568759
|
|
<jemfinch> $seed 50
|
|
<angryman> The operation succeeded.
|
|
<jemfinch> $random
|
|
<angryman> 0.497536568759
|
|
<jemfinch> $range 1 10
|
|
<angryman> 3
|
|
<jemfinch> $range 1 10000000000000
|
|
<angryman> 6374111614437
|
|
<jemfinch> $diceroll
|
|
* angryman rolls a 2
|
|
<jemfinch> $diceroll
|
|
* angryman rolls a 3
|
|
<jemfinch> $diceroll 100
|
|
* angryman rolls a 97
|
|
|
|
So we'll throw this into our example string (where the template says
|
|
to put it) and then we're done! We've written our own plugin from
|
|
scratch (well, from the boilerplate that we got from
|
|
scripts/newplugin.py :)) and survived! Now go write more plugins for
|
|
supybot, and send them to me so I can use them too :)
|