This is a base project for creating FB Chatbots. It has a state machine and User Management and allows you to add functionality with modules.
Put all your logic into lib/bot. We've already prepared everything for you to kickstart your project.
@msg_meta holds @request_type holds the type of the request. Could be one of the following:
- DELIVERY (maybe will be removed in the future, to disruptive)
- OPTIN
- CALLBACK
- TEXT
- IMAGE -> @msg_meta has the url to the image
- LOCATION-> @msg_meta has the long / lat
- AUDIO -> @msg_meta has the url to the mp3 file
- ATTACHMENT_UNKNOWN -> @msg_meta has the url to the ATTACHMENT_UNKNOWN (mostly http links fucked up with fb outbound link system) @current_user hold infos of your current user (last seen, state machine, user id ...)
This function will reply a message back to the user who sent one. you can use Spintax and Emojs.
def reply_message(msg, options={})
def example()
reply_message "make {:pizza:|:sushi:|:lemon:} great again!"
end
This function will send an image back to the user who sent a message to your bot.
def reply_image(img_url)
This function will render HTML and send an image back to the user who sent a message to your bot.
def reply_html(html)
This function will render a bubble and send it to the user.
def reply_bubble
This function will return a string along with a set of button options specified in an array.
def reply_quick_buttons(msg, options=%W(Yes No))
This function will return a string containing the message a user sent to your bot.
def get_message
Most of the time you will not need the Emoji Module because it is already integrated into the reply module.
This function will return the UTF-8 representation of the given Emoji Name
def get_emoji(name)
This function will send a reply message with the UTF-8 representation of the given Emoji Name
def reply_emoji(name)
This function will be always used with the reply_message function of the repy module. It will search for emoji names surrounded with : and replaces them with the UTF-8 representation of the given [Emoji Name]
def compute_emojis(content)
This function is the opposite of the function above.
def parse_emojis(content)
With the web search module you can transport websites to messengers. Just add two methods to your bot logic. One for handling search requests and one for handling user input on the search results.
search_request_on_website(
url: "http://www.example.com/",
form_name: 'search',
result_css_selector: '.result > a',
image_css_selector: 'img',
button_text: 'more infos'
)
handle_search_result(
url: "http://www.example.com",
result_css_selector: ".result"
)
This Module will help you with guiding users through different states of your bot.
Example usage of the State Machine Module:
class BotLogic < BaseBotLogic
def self.bot_logic
state_action 0, :greeting
state_action 1, :turorial
state_action 2, :bye
end
def self.greeting
reply_message "greeting"
state_go
end
def self.turorial
reply_message "turorial"
state_go
end
def self.bye
reply_message "bye"
state_reset
end
end
clone the repo copy config/settings.yml to settings.local.yml and enter your api keys use ngrok or another vpn to tunnel your connection run the following commands
bundle install
rails s
set the webhook to https://tunnel_url/bot and use your token (default: github)
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch:
git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Useful information about your new features'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request on the
Development
branch :D