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203 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
203 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
Here's an example of how to code a few callbacks for SupyBot.
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Let's say you want to make an annoying "Mimic" callback that repeats everything
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anyone says to the bot or on the channels the bot is in. Here's what it looks
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like:
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[code]
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class AnnoyingMimic(irclib.IrcCallback):
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def doPrivmsg(self, irc, msg):
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irc.queueMsg(ircmsgs.privmsg(msg.args[0], msg.args[1]))
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[/code]
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Almost every callback will inherit from irclib.IrcCallback somewhere in their
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class hierarchy. irclib.IrcCallback does a lot of the basic stuff that call-
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backs have to do, and inheriting from it relieves the programmer from such
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pedantries. All you have to do to start writing callbacks inheriting from
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irclib.IrcCallback is write functions of the form "doCommand", where "Command"
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is a valid ircCommand. The "ChannelJoiner" function in the callbacks module
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is a good illustrative example of a callback being called on different
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commands.
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The "irc" argument there is the irc object that is calling the callback. To
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see what kind of interface it provides, read the class definition in irclib.
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Really, you only need to know a few methods if you're writing simple callbacks:
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'queueMsg', which queues a message to be sent later, and 'sendMsg' which tries
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to send it right away (well, as soon as the Irc object's driver asks for
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another message to send, which is generally right away). The Irc object also
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provides some attributes that might come in useful, most notably "nick" (the
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nick of the bot) and "state" (an IrcState object that does various useful
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things like keeping a history of the most recent irc messages.)
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Irc messsages are represented by the IrcMsg class in ircmsgs. It has several
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useful methods and attributes, but it's probably easier for you to read the
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code than for me to tell you about it. The ircmsgs module also provides a set
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of useful little commands to create IrcMsg objects that do particular little
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things; for instance, ircmsgs.privmsg(recipient, msg) sends a PRIVMSG command
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to a channel or user (whatever recipient turns out to be). Check out the code
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to see other functions for making IrcMsg objects.
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Now, that wasn't too bad. Now, however you're going to have to get it into the
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bot. Note that AnnoyingMimic doesn't have an __init__. This'll make it pretty
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simple to get it into the configuration system. Look for the section of the
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config file where you see all the configurations for Irc objects. These
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configurations are going to be lists of (class name, args, kwargs) tuples which
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contain the name of a callback class to be instantiated, a tuple of the argu-
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ments to be passed to the __init__ function for that class, and a dictionary
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of the keyword arguments to be passed to the __init__ function of that class.
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For instance, if AnnoyingMimic was in a file 'mycallbacks.py', its config-
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uration in the config file would look like this:
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[code]
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('mycallbacks.AnnoyingMimic', (), {})
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[/code]
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Since it doesn't have an __init__, there are no arguments or keyword arguments
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to pass to the class. Just throw something like that in a list of callbacks
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that you use for your bot (you can have several lists, you'll notice later on
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in the 'drivers' variable that they're used), and you're ready to go!
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Now, let's say you want to make your AnnoyingMimic class a little less
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annoying. Now, you only want to mimic people *you* find annoying. The easiest
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way to do that is to make it so you tell the class who to mimic when you
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instantiate it. This means adding an __init__ function, and modifying your
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configuration slightly.
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[code]
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class AnnoyingMimic(irclib.IrcCallback):
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def __init__(self, nicksToAnnoy):
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self.nicksToAnnoy = nicksToAnnoy
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def doPrivmsg(self, irc, msg):
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if msg.nick() in self.nicksToAnnoy:
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irc.queueMsg(ircmsgs.privmsg(msg.args[0], msg.args[1]))
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[/code]
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(Now, really, to make this efficient, you'd want a slightly different version
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that turned the nicksToAnnoy argument into a dictionary so nick lookups would
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be O(1) instead of O(n) in the length of the list of nicks to annoy, but that
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would obfuscate the problem. I'll leave that as an exercise left up to the
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reader.)
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So now your AnnoyingMimic class has an __init__ function that accepts a list
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of nicks to annoy, but how do you pass it those nicks? Simple! Change the
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configuration slightly:
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[code]
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('mycallbacks.AnnoyingMimic', (['jemfinch', 'GnuVince'],), {})
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[/code]
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That's the wonder of this configuration system -- you can use all the Python
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syntax you want, so you have practically unlimited flexibility.
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(Note that since the 'arguments' member of that tuple is a single-member tuple,
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you'll have to stick a comma after the first (only) element because otherwise
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Python wouldn't believe it's a tuple.)
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So, again, you choose to make your AnnoyingMimic less annoying -- really, you
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decide to make it not annoying at all by making it only mimic people who ask to
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be repeated. You want to make a class that has an "echo" command that repeats
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the message to those who ask it. You want people to be able to tell the bot,
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"echo The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog!" and have the bot say right
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back, "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog!". That's easy! Here's the
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code:
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[code]
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reply = callbacks.reply
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class Echo(callbacks.Privmsg):
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def echo(self, irc, msg, args):
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"<text>"
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text = self.getArgs(args)
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self.reply(text)
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[/code]
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So that seemed pretty simple there, too. Let's explain what's going on:
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callbacks.Privmsg is an easy way to create "commands" which are simple named
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functions that use a universal scheme for delimiting arguments -- basically,
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they'll all act the same in how they get their arguments. callbacks.Privmsg
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takes a Privmsg (it has a doPrivmsg function and inherits from
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irclib.IrcCallback) and first determines if it's addressed to the bot -- the
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message must either be PRIVMSGed directly to the bot, or PRIVMSGed over a
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channel the bot is in and either start with a character in conf.prefixchars or
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start with the bot's name. Don't worry, callbacks.Privmsg almost always does
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The Right Thing. After deciding that the bot has been addressed,
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callbacks.Privmsg then parses the text of the message into a list of strings.
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Here are a few examples of what it would do:
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"""arg1 arg2 arg3"""
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['arg1', 'arg2', 'arg3']
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"""'arg1 arg2 arg3' arg4""" # Note the quotes.
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['arg1 arg2 arg3', 'arg4']
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getArgs is a function that just a little bit of magic. It takes an optional
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argument (that defaults to 1) of the number of args needed. If more than one
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argument is needed, it checks that the proper number of arguments has been
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given, and then returns a tuple of those arguments. So if you wanted 3 args
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from a message, you'd do something like this:
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(name, oldpassword, newpassword) = self.getArgs(args, 3)
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See how simple that is? If getArgs only needs one argument, however, it does
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something a bit magic -- first of all, it doesn't return a tuple, it just
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returns the argument itself. This makes it so you can type:
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text = self.getArgs(args)
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Instead of:
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(text,) = self.getArgs(args)
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It just makes things easier that way. Also, however, if *only* one argument
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is needed, it does something a bit more magical. A lot of commands take only
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one argument and then do some processing on it -- for example, look at the
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privmsgs module, the "FunCommands" callback, at the commands 'leet' and
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'rot13'. This is all great, but because of the way args are normally parsed
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by callbacks.Privmsg, you'd have to always enclose that argument in quotes.
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For instance, you'd have to type this:
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bot: leet "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog."
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From experience, I can tell you that most people will forget the quotes almost
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every time they talk to the bot. Since having only one argument is such a
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command case, getArgs special-cases it to string.join all the args with spaces.
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Now you can say:
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bot: leet The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
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And it'll return the same exact thing as above. Of course, the original still
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works, but since people forget the quotes so often, it's good to go easy on
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them :) We're actually using that behavior with our callback above: by using
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getArgs, now our users can say:
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echo foo bar baz
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Instead of always having to say:
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echo "foo bar baz"
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Anyway, you're probably wondering how that callback works. It inherits from
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callbacks.Privmsg, which as I mentioned before, has a doPrivmsg callback. So
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when callbacks.Privmsg receives a PRIVMSG command, it parses it and then tries
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to find if it has a method by the same name as the command -- if it does, and
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that method looks like this:
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def method(self, irc, msg, args):
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...
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Then it calls that method with the appropriate arguments. Easy, huh? Don't
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worry, it gets even cooler :) So you write a command like echo and you want
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to provide the user with some help using it. You were probably wondering why
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the docstring to that "echo" method above looked so weird, but now you know:
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it *is* the help for the command! callbacks.Privmsg has its own command, help,
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which will return the *docstring* for any other command! So it's cake to write
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your own commands and help.
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(This, of course, means that if you *don't* write a help string for your
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command, you have no excuse and are just plain lazy. So write help strings!)
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There's a bit more I could tutorialize on, but it would be more esoteric, and
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better a reference material than as a tutorial. I'll put that in another file.
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