pinhook ======= |Supported Python versions| |Package License| |PyPI package format| |Package development status| |With love from tilde.town| the pluggable python framework for IRC bots and Twitch bots Tutorial -------- Installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~ :: $ pip install pinhook Creating an IRC Bot ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To create the bot, just create a python file with the following: .. code:: python from pinhook.bot import Bot bot = Bot( channels=['#foo', '#bar'], nickname='ph-bot', server='irc.freenode.net' ) bot.start() This will start a basic bot and look for plugins in the 'plugins' directory to add functionality. Optional arguments are: - ``port``: choose a custom port to connect to the server (default: 6667) - ``ops``: list of operators who can do things like make the bot join other channels or quit (default: empty list) - ``plugin_dir``: directory where the bot should look for plugins (default: "plugins") - ``log_level``: string indicating logging level. Logging can be disabled by setting this to "off". (default: "info") - ``ns_pass``: this is the password to identify with nickserv - ``server_pass``: password for the server - ``ssl_required``: boolean to turn ssl on or off Creating a Twitch Bot ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pinhook has a baked in way to connect directly to a twitch channel .. code:: python from pinhook.bot import TwitchBot bot = TwitchBot( nickname='ph-bot', channel='#channel', token='super-secret-oauth-token' ) bot.start() This function has far less options, as the server, port, and ssl are already handled by twitch. Optional aguments are: - ``ops`` - ``plugin_dir`` - ``log_level`` These options are the same for both IRC and Twitch Creating plugins ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In your chosen plugins directory ("plugins" by default) make a python file with a function. You can use the ``@pinhook.plugin.register`` decorator to tell the bot the command to activate the function. The function will need to be structured as such: .. code:: python import pinhook.plugin @pinhook.plugin.register('!test') def test_plugin(msg): message = '{}: this is a test!'.format(msg.nick) return pinhook.plugin.message(message) The function will need to accept a single argument in order to accept a ``Message`` object from the bot. The ``Message`` object has the following attributes: - ``cmd``: the command that triggered the function - ``nick``: the user who triggered the command - ``arg``: all the trailing text after the command. This is what you will use to get optional information for the command - ``channel``: the channel where the command was initiated - ``ops``: the list of bot operators - ``botnick``: the nickname of the bot - ``logger``: instance of ``Bot``'s logger The plugin function **must** return one of the following in order to give a response to the command: - ``pinhook.plugin.message``: basic message in channel where command was triggered - ``pinhook.plugin.action``: CTCP action in the channel where command was triggered (basically like using ``/me does a thing``) Examples -------- There are some basic examples in the ``examples`` directory in this repository. For a live and maintained bot running the current version of pinhook see `pinhook-tilde `__. .. |Supported Python versions| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/pinhook.svg :target: https://pypi.org/project/pinhook .. |Package License| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/pinhook.svg :target: https://github.com/archangelic/pinhook/blob/master/LICENSE .. |PyPI package format| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/format/pinhook.svg :target: https://pypi.org/project/pinhook .. |Package development status| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/status/pinhook.svg :target: https://pypi.org/project/pinhook .. |With love from tilde.town| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/with%20love%20from-tilde%20town-e0b0ff.svg :target: https://tilde.town