Bot Framework v4 welcome users bot sample
This bot has been created using Bot Framework, it shows how to use the prompts classes included in botbuilder-dialogs
. This bot will ask for the user's name and age, then store the responses. It demonstrates a multi-turn dialog flow using a text prompt, a number prompt, and state accessors to store and retrieve values.
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.NET Core SDK version 2.1
# determine dotnet version dotnet --version
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Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/Microsoft/botbuilder-samples.git
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In a terminal, navigate to
samples/csharp_dotnetcore/05.multi-turn-prompt
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Run the bot from a terminal or from Visual Studio, choose option A or B.
A) From a terminal
# run the bot dotnet run
B) Or from Visual Studio
- Launch Visual Studio
- File -> Open -> Project/Solution
- Navigate to
samples/csharp_dotnetcore/05.multi-turn-prompt
folder - Select
MultiTurnPromptBot.csproj
file - Press
F5
to run the project
Bot Framework Emulator is a desktop application that allows bot developers to test and debug their bots on localhost or running remotely through a tunnel.
- Install the Bot Framework Emulator version 4.3.0 or greater from here
- Launch Bot Framework Emulator
- File -> Open Bot
- Enter a Bot URL of
http://localhost:3978/api/messages
A conversation between a bot and a user often involves asking (prompting) the user for information, parsing the user's response, and then acting on that information. This sample demonstrates how to prompt users for information using the different prompt types included in the botbuilder-dialogs library and supported by the SDK.
The botbuilder-dialogs
library includes a variety of pre-built prompt classes, including text, number, and datetime types. This
sample demonstrates using a text prompt to collect the user's name, then using a number prompt to collect an age.
To learn more about deploying a bot to Azure, see Deploy your bot to Azure for a complete list of deployment instructions.