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Create your own commands
Before creating your custom commands, you have to install the PHP Telegram Bot library. Head over to the example-bot repository for basic installation instructions.
Create a folder where your custom commands will be living (e.g. Commands
in the current (root) directory).
Then add your custom commands path to the list of command locations in your hook.php
or manager.php
(depending on which method you are using):
// hook.php
...
// Define all paths for your custom commands in this array (leave as empty array if not used)
$commands_paths = [
__DIR__ . '/Commands',
];
// Add this line inside the try{}
$telegram->addCommandsPaths($commands_paths);
...
// manager.php
...
'commands' => [
// Define all paths for your custom commands
'paths' => [
__DIR__ . '/Commands',
],
],
...
Assume that we want to create a test command with usage /test
.
Create a new .php
file named TestCommand.php
in your custom commands folder (that we added in Step One):
./Commands/TestCommand.php
NOTE: The first letter of the filename and the word "Command" must be in uppercase. All other letters are lower case (e.g. TestCommand.php
, TestwithmultiplewordsCommand.php
)
Decide if the command you want to create is for all users or only admins.
- User command: Command needs to belong to the
UserCommands
namespace and extend theUserCommand
class. - Admin command: Command needs to belong to the
AdminCommands
namespace and extend theAdminCommand
class.
First of all define namespace
and use
dependencies for the new command class in TestCommand.php
file (our TestCommand should be available to all users, so it will belong to the UserCommands
namespace):
namespace Longman\TelegramBot\Commands\UserCommands;
use Longman\TelegramBot\Commands\UserCommand;
use Longman\TelegramBot\Request;
Now create a class named TestCommand
(identical to your filename) that extends the UserCommand
class:
class TestCommand extends UserCommand
{
Define required properties:
protected $name = 'test'; // Your command's name
protected $description = 'A command for test'; // Your command description
protected $usage = '/test'; // Usage of your command
protected $version = '1.0.0'; // Version of your command
Every command must have a method called execute
, which gets executed when your command is called. You can create your own methods inside your new command class, but you have to call them from within execute
.
execute
method:
public function execute(): \Longman\TelegramBot\Entities\ServerResponse
{
$message = $this->getMessage(); // Get Message object
$chat_id = $message->getChat()->getId(); // Get the current Chat ID
$data = [ // Set up the new message data
'chat_id' => $chat_id, // Set Chat ID to send the message to
'text' => 'This is just a Test...', // Set message to send
];
return Request::sendMessage($data); // Send message!
}
}
Now the library will automatically find your new command and when a user types /test
, the bot will answer with This is just a Test...
.
So as you can see, creating a custom command is very easy. For more complex commands, be sure to check out the example commands.
Here is the full TestCommand.php
for reference:
<?php
namespace Longman\TelegramBot\Commands\UserCommands;
use Longman\TelegramBot\Commands\UserCommand;
use Longman\TelegramBot\Request;
class TestCommand extends UserCommand
{
protected $name = 'test'; // Your command's name
protected $description = 'A command for test'; // Your command description
protected $usage = '/test'; // Usage of your command
protected $version = '1.0.0'; // Version of your command
public function execute(): \Longman\TelegramBot\Entities\ServerResponse
{
$message = $this->getMessage(); // Get Message object
$chat_id = $message->getChat()->getId(); // Get the current Chat ID
$data = [ // Set up the new message data
'chat_id' => $chat_id, // Set Chat ID to send the message to
'text' => 'This is just a Test...', // Set message to send
];
return Request::sendMessage($data); // Send message!
}
}