This is an extention of Rapptz' discord.py to help make it even easier to make new bots, and simpler to make complex ones.
Current version of the code should be stable, but use at your own risk.
The documentation will be built up over time hopefully.
For support and such you can contact me on my Discord Server.
This is a part of the official PyPI package directory and can be installed with pip.
pip install discordbot.py
To create a bot that will greet new members when they join and greet
anyone that types !greet
you can do the following:
import discordbot
import asyncio
bot = discordbot.DiscordBot()
@bot.event
async def on_member_join(member):
await bot.send_message(member.server, "Welcome {0.mention}, would you like to introduce yourself?".format(member))
@bot.command(pass_context=True)
async def greet(ctx):
"""Greets the user.
This is additional help text that will only show up if
help is called on the command itself as opposed to the
normal short help which shows up in the main help.
"""
await bot.responses.say("Hi there, {0.mention}, how are you?".format(ctx.message.author))
bot.run()
This should be accompanied by a settings.json
file like this:
{
"meta": {
"owner": "YOUR_ID",
"prefix": "!",
"description": "Optional description of the bot."
},
"credentials": {
"token": "YOUR_TOKEN_HERE",
"client_id": "YOUR_CLIENT_ID"
}
}
Administrative and Meta cogs are built-in.
This bakes the commands extension directly in by default.
The bot can be fully set up through python with no JSON or vice versa.
Your bot.py
could be as minimal as this:
import asyncio
import discordbot
bot = discordbot.DiscordBot()
if __name__ == '__main__':
bot.load_cogs()
bot.run()
As long as you have a JSON file like this:
{
"meta": {
"owner": "YOUR_ID",
"prefix": "ANY_PREFIX",
"description": "Optional description of the bot."
},
"credentials": {
"token": "YOUR_TOKEN_HERE",
"client_id": "YOUR_CLIENT_ID"
},
"cogs": ["cog_folder.cog_name", "cog_folder.another_cog"]
}
This is very similar to how it is done for discord.py
The new help formatter is prettier and done using embeds.
The searching and matching has been adjusted to better match what the user is looking for including being case insensitive.
This includes a simpler and easy to follow embed builder.
This allows a preset of colors for things like success, failure, or the
Discord blurple. Also has utility functions for generating Color
objects from RGB values.
This allows responses and other messages to be sent using automatically built embeds to make the messages look nicer. This also some utility functions like a toggle which uses the success and failure colors.
The utilities include setting constants, asynchronous web requests, string similarity ratios, word counts, and markdown escaping—this is especially useful for those funky usernames.
In a separate folder the bot will generate 3 logs, one for errors (hopefully empty), one for stats which gives more specifics and can help track down pesky bugs and the last one which rounds out additional info like where your bot is being added and kicked from. This can be overridden of course.