.. currentmodule:: discord
v1.0 is one of the biggest breaking changes in the library due to a complete redesign.
The amount of changes are so massive and long that for all intents and purposes, it is a completely new library.
Part of the redesign involves making things more easy to use and natural. Things are done on the :ref:`models <discord_api_models>` instead of requiring a :class:`Client` instance to do any work.
In order to make development easier and also to allow for our dependencies to upgrade to allow usage of 3.7 or higher, the library had to remove support for Python versions lower than 3.5.3, which essentially means that support for Python 3.4 is dropped.
Below are major model changes that have happened in v1.0
Before v1.0, all snowflakes (the id
attribute) were strings. This has been changed to :class:`int`.
Quick example:
# before ch = client.get_channel('84319995256905728') if message.author.id == '80528701850124288': ... # after ch = client.get_channel(84319995256905728) if message.author.id == 80528701850124288: ...
This change allows for fewer errors when using the Copy ID feature in the official client since you no longer have to wrap it in quotes and allows for optimisation opportunities by allowing ETF to be used instead of JSON internally.
The official API documentation calls the "Server" concept a "Guild" instead. In order to be more consistent with the API documentation when necessary, the model has been renamed to :class:`Guild` and all instances referring to it has been changed as well.
A list of changes is as follows:
Before | After |
Message.server |
:attr:`Message.guild` |
Channel.server |
:attr:`.GuildChannel.guild` |
Client.servers |
:attr:`Client.guilds` |
Client.get_server |
:meth:`Client.get_guild` |
Emoji.server |
:attr:`Emoji.guild` |
Role.server |
:attr:`Role.guild` |
Invite.server |
:attr:`Invite.guild` |
Member.server |
:attr:`Member.guild` |
Permissions.manage_server |
:attr:`Permissions.manage_guild` |
VoiceClient.server |
:attr:`VoiceClient.guild` |
Client.create_server |
:meth:`Client.create_guild` |
As mentioned earlier, a lot of functionality was moved out of :class:`Client` and put into their respective :ref:`model <discord_api_models>`.
A list of these changes is enumerated below.
In order to be a bit more consistent, certain things that were properties were changed to methods instead.
The following are now methods instead of properties (requires parentheses):
Prior to v1.0 some aggregating properties that retrieved models would return "dict view" objects.
As a consequence, when the dict would change size while you would iterate over it, a RuntimeError would be raised and crash the task. To alleviate this, the "dict view" objects were changed into lists.
The following views were changed to a list:
- :attr:`Client.guilds`
- :attr:`Client.users` (new in v1.0)
- :attr:`Client.emojis` (new in v1.0)
- :attr:`Guild.channels`
- :attr:`Guild.text_channels` (new in v1.0)
- :attr:`Guild.voice_channels` (new in v1.0)
- :attr:`Guild.emojis`
- :attr:`Guild.members`
Earlier, in v0.11.0 a :class:`VoiceState` class was added to refer to voice states along with a :attr:`Member.voice` attribute to refer to it.
However, it was transparent to the user. In an effort to make the library save more memory, the voice state change is now more visible.
The only way to access voice attributes is via the :attr:`Member.voice` attribute. Note that if
the member does not have a voice state this attribute can be None
.
Quick example:
# before member.deaf member.voice.voice_channel # after if member.voice: # can be None member.voice.deaf member.voice.channel
In v1.0 to save memory, :class:`User` and :class:`Member` are no longer inherited. Instead, they are "flattened" by having equivalent properties that map out to the functional underlying :class:`User`. Thus, there is no functional change in how they are used. However this breaks :func:`isinstance` checks and thus is something to keep in mind.
These memory savings were accomplished by having a global :class:`User` cache, and as a positive consequence you can now easily fetch a :class:`User` by their ID by using the new :meth:`Client.get_user`. You can also get a list of all :class:`User` your client can see with :attr:`Client.users`.
Prior to v1.0, channels were two different types, Channel
and PrivateChannel
with a is_private
property to help differentiate between them.
In order to save memory the channels have been split into 4 different types:
- :class:`TextChannel` for guild text channels.
- :class:`VoiceChannel` for guild voice channels.
- :class:`DMChannel` for DM channels with members.
- :class:`GroupChannel` for Group DM channels with members.
With this split came the removal of the is_private
attribute. You should now use :func:`isinstance`.
The types are split into two different :ref:`discord_api_abcs`:
- :class:`abc.GuildChannel` for guild channels.
- :class:`abc.PrivateChannel` for private channels (DMs and group DMs).
So to check if something is a guild channel you would do:
isinstance(channel, discord.abc.GuildChannel)
And to check if it's a private channel you would do:
isinstance(channel, discord.abc.PrivateChannel)
Of course, if you're looking for only a specific type you can pass that too, e.g.
isinstance(channel, discord.TextChannel)
With this type split also came event changes, which are enumerated in :ref:`migrating_1_0_event_changes`.
There were lots of other things added or removed in the models in general.
They will be enumerated here.
Removed
:meth:`Client.login` no longer accepts email and password logins.
- Use a token and
bot=False
.
- Use a token and
Client.get_all_emojis
- Use :attr:`Client.emojis` instead.
Client.messages
- Use read-only :attr:`Client.cached_messages` instead.
Client.wait_for_message
andClient.wait_for_reaction
are gone.- Use :meth:`Client.wait_for` instead.
Channel.voice_members
- Use :attr:`VoiceChannel.members` instead.
Channel.is_private
- Use
isinstance
instead with one of the :ref:`discord_api_abcs` instead. - e.g.
isinstance(channel, discord.abc.GuildChannel)
will check if it isn't a private channel.
- Use
Client.accept_invite
- There is no replacement for this one. This functionality is deprecated API wise.
Guild.default_channel
/Server.default_channel
andChannel.is_default
- The concept of a default channel was removed from Discord. See #329.
Message.edited_timestamp
- Use :attr:`Message.edited_at` instead.
Message.timestamp
- Use :attr:`Message.created_at` instead.
Colour.to_tuple()
- Use :meth:`Colour.to_rgb` instead.
Permissions.view_audit_logs
- Use :attr:`Permissions.view_audit_log` instead.
Member.game
- Use :attr:`Member.activities` instead.
Guild.role_hierarchy
/Server.role_hierarchy
- Use :attr:`Guild.roles` instead. Note that while sorted, it is in the opposite order
of what the old
Guild.role_hierarchy
used to be.
- Use :attr:`Guild.roles` instead. Note that while sorted, it is in the opposite order
of what the old
Changed
- :attr:`Member.avatar_url` and :attr:`User.avatar_url` now return the default avatar if a custom one is not set.
- :attr:`Message.embeds` is now a list of :class:`Embed` instead of :class:`dict` objects.
- :attr:`Message.attachments` is now a list of :class:`Attachment` instead of :class:`dict` object.
- :attr:`Guild.roles` is now sorted through hierarchy. The first element is always the
@everyone
role.
Added
- :class:`Attachment` to represent a discord attachment.
- :class:`CategoryChannel` to represent a channel category.
- :attr:`VoiceChannel.members` for fetching members connected to a voice channel.
- :attr:`TextChannel.members` for fetching members that can see the channel.
- :attr:`Role.members` for fetching members that have the role.
- :attr:`Guild.text_channels` for fetching text channels only.
- :attr:`Guild.voice_channels` for fetching voice channels only.
- :attr:`Guild.categories` for fetching channel categories only.
- :attr:`TextChannel.category` and :attr:`VoiceChannel.category` to get the category a channel belongs to.
- :meth:`Guild.by_category` to get channels grouped by their category.
- :attr:`Guild.chunked` to check member chunking status.
- :attr:`Guild.explicit_content_filter` to fetch the content filter.
- :attr:`Guild.shard_id` to get a guild's Shard ID if you're sharding.
- :attr:`Client.users` to get all visible :class:`User` instances.
- :meth:`Client.get_user` to get a :class:`User` by ID.
- :meth:`User.avatar_url_as` to get an avatar in a specific size or format.
- :meth:`Guild.vanity_invite` to fetch the guild's vanity invite.
- :meth:`Guild.audit_logs` to fetch the guild's audit logs.
- :attr:`Message.webhook_id` to fetch the message's webhook ID.
- :attr:`Message.activity` and :attr:`Message.application` for Rich Presence related information.
- :meth:`TextChannel.is_nsfw` to check if a text channel is NSFW.
- :meth:`Colour.from_rgb` to construct a :class:`Colour` from RGB tuple.
- :meth:`Guild.get_role` to get a role by its ID.
One of the changes that were done was the merger of the previous Client.send_message
and Client.send_file
functionality into a single method, :meth:`~abc.Messageable.send`.
Basically:
# before await client.send_message(channel, 'Hello') # after await channel.send('Hello')
This supports everything that the old send_message
supported such as embeds:
e = discord.Embed(title='foo') await channel.send('Hello', embed=e)
There is a caveat with sending files however, as this functionality was expanded to support multiple file attachments, you must now use a :class:`File` pseudo-namedtuple to upload a single file.
# before await client.send_file(channel, 'cool.png', filename='testing.png', content='Hello') # after await channel.send('Hello', file=discord.File('cool.png', 'testing.png'))
This change was to facilitate multiple file uploads:
my_files = [ discord.File('cool.png', 'testing.png'), discord.File(some_fp, 'cool_filename.png'), ] await channel.send('Your images:', files=my_files)
Prior to v1.0, certain functions like Client.logs_from
would return a different type if done in Python 3.4 or 3.5+.
In v1.0, this change has been reverted and will now return a singular type meeting an abstract concept called :class:`AsyncIterator`.
This allows you to iterate over it like normal:
async for message in channel.history(): print(message)
Or turn it into a list:
messages = await channel.history().flatten() for message in messages: print(message)
A handy aspect of returning :class:`AsyncIterator` is that it allows you to chain functions together such as :meth:`AsyncIterator.map` or :meth:`AsyncIterator.filter`:
async for m_id in channel.history().filter(lambda m: m.author == client.user).map(lambda m: m.id): print(m_id)
The functions passed to :meth:`AsyncIterator.map` or :meth:`AsyncIterator.filter` can be either coroutines or regular functions.
You can also get single elements a la :func:`discord.utils.find` or :func:`discord.utils.get` via :meth:`AsyncIterator.get` or :meth:`AsyncIterator.find`:
my_last_message = await channel.history().get(author=client.user)
The following return :class:`AsyncIterator`:
A lot of events have gone through some changes.
Many events with server
in the name were changed to use guild
instead.
Before:
on_server_join
on_server_remove
on_server_update
on_server_role_create
on_server_role_delete
on_server_role_update
on_server_emojis_update
on_server_available
on_server_unavailable
After:
- :func:`on_guild_join`
- :func:`on_guild_remove`
- :func:`on_guild_update`
- :func:`on_guild_role_create`
- :func:`on_guild_role_delete`
- :func:`on_guild_role_update`
- :func:`on_guild_emojis_update`
- :func:`on_guild_available`
- :func:`on_guild_unavailable`
The :func:`on_voice_state_update` event has received an argument change.
Before:
async def on_voice_state_update(before, after)
After:
async def on_voice_state_update(member, before, after)
Instead of two :class:`Member` objects, the new event takes one :class:`Member` object and two :class:`VoiceState` objects.
The :func:`on_guild_emojis_update` event has received an argument change.
Before:
async def on_guild_emojis_update(before, after)
After:
async def on_guild_emojis_update(guild, before, after)
The first argument is now the :class:`Guild` that the emojis were updated from.
The :func:`on_member_ban` event has received an argument change as well:
Before:
async def on_member_ban(member)
After:
async def on_member_ban(guild, user)
As part of the change, the event can either receive a :class:`User` or :class:`Member`. To help in the cases that have :class:`User`, the :class:`Guild` is provided as the first parameter.
The on_channel_
events have received a type level split (see :ref:`migrating_1_0_channel_split`).
Before:
on_channel_delete
on_channel_create
on_channel_update
After:
- :func:`on_guild_channel_delete`
- :func:`on_guild_channel_create`
- :func:`on_guild_channel_update`
- :func:`on_private_channel_delete`
- :func:`on_private_channel_create`
- :func:`on_private_channel_update`
The on_guild_channel_
events correspond to :class:`abc.GuildChannel` being updated (i.e. :class:`TextChannel`
and :class:`VoiceChannel`) and the on_private_channel_
events correspond to :class:`abc.PrivateChannel` being
updated (i.e. :class:`DMChannel` and :class:`GroupChannel`).
Voice sending has gone through a complete redesign.
In particular:
- Connection is done through :meth:`VoiceChannel.connect` instead of
Client.join_voice_channel
. - You no longer create players and operate on them (you no longer store them).
- You instead request :class:`VoiceClient` to play an :class:`AudioSource` via :meth:`VoiceClient.play`.
- There are different built-in :class:`AudioSource`s.
- :class:`FFmpegPCMAudio` is the equivalent of
create_ffmpeg_player
- :class:`FFmpegPCMAudio` is the equivalent of
- create_ffmpeg_player/create_stream_player/create_ytdl_player have all been removed.
- The goal is to create :class:`AudioSource` instead.
- Using :meth:`VoiceClient.play` will not return an
AudioPlayer
.- Instead, it's "flattened" like :class:`User` -> :class:`Member` is.
- The
after
parameter now takes a single parameter (the error).
Basically:
Before:
vc = await client.join_voice_channel(channel) player = vc.create_ffmpeg_player('testing.mp3', after=lambda: print('done')) player.start() player.is_playing() player.pause() player.resume() player.stop() # ...
After:
vc = await channel.connect() vc.play(discord.FFmpegPCMAudio('testing.mp3'), after=lambda e: print('done', e)) vc.is_playing() vc.pause() vc.resume() vc.stop() # ...
With the changed :class:`AudioSource` design, you can now change the source that the :class:`VoiceClient` is playing at runtime via :attr:`VoiceClient.source`.
For example, you can add a :class:`PCMVolumeTransformer` to allow changing the volume:
vc.source = discord.PCMVolumeTransformer(vc.source) vc.source.volume = 0.6
An added benefit of the redesign is that it will be much more resilient towards reconnections:
- The voice websocket will now automatically re-connect and re-do the handshake when disconnected.
- The initial connect handshake will now retry up to 5 times so you no longer get as many
asyncio.TimeoutError
. - Audio will now stop and resume when a disconnect is found.
- This includes changing voice regions etc.
Prior to v1.0, the machinery for waiting for an event outside of the event itself was done through two different
functions, Client.wait_for_message
and Client.wait_for_reaction
. One problem with one such approach is that it did
not allow you to wait for events outside of the ones provided by the library.
In v1.0 the concept of waiting for another event has been generalised to work with any event as :meth:`Client.wait_for`.
For example, to wait for a message:
# before msg = await client.wait_for_message(author=message.author, channel=message.channel) # after def pred(m): return m.author == message.author and m.channel == message.channel msg = await client.wait_for('message', check=pred)
To facilitate multiple returns, :meth:`Client.wait_for` returns either a single argument, no arguments, or a tuple of arguments.
For example, to wait for a reaction:
reaction, user = await client.wait_for('reaction_add', check=lambda r, u: u.id == 176995180300206080) # use user and reaction
Since this function now can return multiple arguments, the timeout
parameter will now raise a :exc:`asyncio.TimeoutError`
when reached instead of setting the return to None
. For example:
def pred(m):
return m.author == message.author and m.channel == message.channel
try:
msg = await client.wait_for('message', check=pred, timeout=60.0)
except asyncio.TimeoutError:
await channel.send('You took too long...')
else:
await channel.send('You said {0.content}, {0.author}.'.format(msg))
Following v1.0 of the library, we've updated our requirements to :doc:`aiohttp <aio:index>` v2.0 or higher.
Since this is a backwards incompatible change, it is recommended that you see the changes and the :doc:`aio:migration_to_2xx` pages for details on the breaking changes in :doc:`aiohttp <aio:index>`.
Of the most significant for common users is the removal of helper functions such as:
aiohttp.get
aiohttp.post
aiohttp.delete
aiohttp.patch
aiohttp.head
aiohttp.put
aiohttp.request
It is recommended that you create a session instead:
async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as sess: async with sess.get('url') as resp: # work with resp
Since it is better to not create a session for every request, you should store it in a variable and then call
session.close
on it when it needs to be disposed.
The library has received significant changes on how it handles sharding and now has sharding as a first-class citizen.
If using a Bot account and you want to shard your bot in a single process then you can use the :class:`AutoShardedClient`.
This class allows you to use sharding without having to launch multiple processes or deal with complicated IPC.
It should be noted that the sharded client does not support user accounts. This is due to the changes in connection logic and state handling.
Usage is as simple as doing:
client = discord.AutoShardedClient()
instead of using :class:`Client`.
This will launch as many shards as your bot needs using the /gateway/bot
endpoint, which allocates about 1000 guilds
per shard.
If you want more control over the sharding you can specify shard_count
and shard_ids
.
# launch 10 shards regardless client = discord.AutoShardedClient(shard_count=10) # launch specific shard IDs in this process client = discord.AutoShardedClient(shard_count=10, shard_ids=(1, 2, 5, 6))
For users of the command extension, there is also :class:`~ext.commands.AutoShardedBot` which behaves similarly.
In v1.0, the auto reconnection logic has been powered up significantly.
:meth:`Client.connect` has gained a new keyword argument, reconnect
that defaults to True
which controls
the reconnect logic. When enabled, the client will automatically reconnect in all instances of your internet going
offline or Discord going offline with exponential back-off.
:meth:`Client.run` and :meth:`Client.start` gains this keyword argument as well, but for most cases you will not need to specify it unless turning it off.
Due to the :ref:`migrating_1_0_model_state` changes, some of the design of the extension module had to undergo some design changes as well.
In v1.0, the :class:`.Context` has received a lot of changes with how it's retrieved and used.
The biggest change is that pass_context=True
no longer exists, :class:`.Context` is always passed. Ergo:
# before
@bot.command()
async def foo():
await bot.say('Hello')
# after
@bot.command()
async def foo(ctx):
await ctx.send('Hello')
The reason for this is because :class:`~ext.commands.Context` now meets the requirements of :class:`abc.Messageable`. This
makes it have similar functionality to :class:`TextChannel` or :class:`DMChannel`. Using :meth:`~.Context.send`
will either DM the user in a DM context or send a message in the channel it was in, similar to the old bot.say
functionality. The old helpers have been removed in favour of the new :class:`abc.Messageable` interface. See
:ref:`migrating_1_0_removed_helpers` for more information.
Since the :class:`~ext.commands.Context` is now passed by default, several shortcuts have been added:
New Shortcuts
- :attr:`ctx.author <ext.commands.Context.author>` is a shortcut for
ctx.message.author
. - :attr:`ctx.guild <ext.commands.Context.guild>` is a shortcut for
ctx.message.guild
. - :attr:`ctx.channel <ext.commands.Context.channel>` is a shortcut for
ctx.message.channel
. - :attr:`ctx.me <ext.commands.Context.me>` is a shortcut for
ctx.message.guild.me
orctx.bot.user
. - :attr:`ctx.voice_client <ext.commands.Context.voice_client>` is a shortcut for
ctx.message.guild.voice_client
.
New Functionality
:meth:`.Context.reinvoke` to invoke a command again.
- This is useful for bypassing cooldowns.
:attr:`.Context.valid` to check if a context can be invoked with :meth:`.Bot.invoke`.
:meth:`.Context.send_help` to show the help command for an entity using the new :class:`~.ext.commands.HelpCommand` system.
- This is useful if you want to show the user help if they misused a command.
In v1.0, there is now the ability to subclass :class:`~ext.commands.Context` and use it instead of the default provided one.
For example, if you want to add some functionality to the context:
class MyContext(commands.Context):
@property
def secret(self):
return 'my secret here'
Then you can use :meth:`~ext.commands.Bot.get_context` inside :func:`on_message` with combination with :meth:`~ext.commands.Bot.invoke` to use your custom context:
class MyBot(commands.Bot):
async def on_message(self, message):
ctx = await self.get_context(message, cls=MyContext)
await self.invoke(ctx)
Now inside your commands you will have access to your custom context:
@bot.command()
async def secret(ctx):
await ctx.send(ctx.secret)
With the new :class:`.Context` changes, a lot of message sending helpers have been removed.
For a full list of changes, see below:
Before | After |
Bot.say |
:meth:`.Context.send` |
Bot.upload |
:meth:`.Context.send` |
Bot.whisper |
ctx.author.send |
Bot.type |
:meth:`.Context.typing` or :meth:`.Context.trigger_typing` |
Bot.reply |
No replacement. |
As mentioned earlier, the first command change is that pass_context=True
no longer
exists, so there is no need to pass this as a parameter.
Another change is the removal of no_pm=True
. Instead, use the new :func:`~ext.commands.guild_only` built-in
check.
The commands
attribute of :class:`~ext.commands.Bot` and :class:`~ext.commands.Group` have been changed from a
dictionary to a set that does not have aliases. To retrieve the previous dictionary behaviour, use all_commands
instead.
Command instances have gained new attributes and properties:
- :attr:`~ext.commands.Command.signature` to get the signature of the command.
- :attr:`~.Command.usage`, an attribute to override the default signature.
- :attr:`~.Command.root_parent` to get the root parent group of a subcommand.
For :class:`~ext.commands.Group` and :class:`~ext.commands.Bot` the following changed:
Changed :attr:`~.GroupMixin.commands` to be a :class:`set` without aliases.
- Use :attr:`~.GroupMixin.all_commands` to get the old :class:`dict` with all commands.
Prior to v1.0, :func:`~ext.commands.check`s could only be synchronous. As of v1.0 checks can now be coroutines.
Along with this change, a couple new checks were added.
:func:`~ext.commands.guild_only` replaces the old
no_pm=True
functionality.:func:`~ext.commands.is_owner` uses the :meth:`Client.application_info` endpoint by default to fetch owner ID.
- This is actually powered by a different function, :meth:`~ext.commands.Bot.is_owner`.
- You can set the owner ID yourself by setting :attr:`.Bot.owner_id`.
:func:`~ext.commands.is_nsfw` checks if the channel the command is in is a NSFW channel.
- This is powered by the new :meth:`TextChannel.is_nsfw` method.
All command extension events have changed.
Before:
on_command(command, ctx) on_command_completion(command, ctx) on_command_error(error, ctx)
After:
on_command(ctx) on_command_completion(ctx) on_command_error(ctx, error)
The extraneous command
parameter in :func:`.on_command` and :func:`.on_command_completion`
have been removed. The :class:`~ext.commands.Command` instance was not kept up-to date so it was incorrect. In order to get
the up to date :class:`~ext.commands.Command` instance, use the :attr:`.Context.command`
attribute.
The error handlers, either :meth:`.Command.error` or :func:`.on_command_error`, have been re-ordered to use the :class:`~ext.commands.Context` as its first parameter to be consistent with other events and commands.
The HelpFormatter
class has been removed. It has been replaced with a :class:`~.commands.HelpCommand` class. This class now stores all the command handling and processing of the help command.
The help command is now stored in the :attr:`.Bot.help_command` attribute. As an added extension, you can disable the help command completely by assigning the attribute to None
or passing it at __init__
as help_command=None
.
The new interface allows the help command to be customised through special methods that can be overridden.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.send_bot_help`
- Called when the user requested for help with the entire bot.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.send_cog_help`
- Called when the user requested for help with a specific cog.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.send_group_help`
- Called when the user requested for help with a :class:`~.commands.Group`
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.send_command_help`
- Called when the user requested for help with a :class:`~.commands.Command`
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.get_destination`
- Called to know where to send the help messages. Useful for deciding whether to DM or not.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.command_not_found`
- A function (or coroutine) that returns a presentable no command found string.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.subcommand_not_found`
- A function (or coroutine) that returns a string when a subcommand is not found.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.send_error_message`
- A coroutine that gets passed the result of :meth:`.HelpCommand.command_not_found` and :meth:`.HelpCommand.subcommand_not_found`.
- By default it just sends the message. But you can, for example, override it to put it in an embed.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.on_help_command_error`
- The :ref:`error handler <ext_commands_error_handler>` for the help command if you want to add one.
- :meth:`.HelpCommand.prepare_help_command`
- A coroutine that is called right before the help command processing is done.
Certain subclasses can implement more customisable methods.
The old HelpFormatter
was replaced with :class:`~.commands.DefaultHelpCommand`, which implements all of the logic of the old help command. The customisable methods can be found in the accompanying documentation.
The library now provides a new more minimalistic :class:`~.commands.HelpCommand` implementation that doesn't take as much space, :class:`~.commands.MinimalHelpCommand`. The customisable methods can also be found in the accompanying documentation.
A frequent request was if you could associate a help command with a cog. The new design allows for dynamically changing of cog through binding it to the :attr:`.HelpCommand.cog` attribute. After this assignment the help command will pretend to be part of the cog and everything should work as expected. When the cog is unloaded then the help command will be "unbound" from the cog.
For example, to implement a :class:`~.commands.HelpCommand` in a cog, the following snippet can be used.
class MyHelpCommand(commands.MinimalHelpCommand):
def get_command_signature(self, command):
return '{0.clean_prefix}{1.qualified_name} {1.signature}'.format(self, command)
class MyCog(commands.Cog):
def __init__(self, bot):
self._original_help_command = bot.help_command
bot.help_command = MyHelpCommand()
bot.help_command.cog = self
def cog_unload(self):
self.bot.help_command = self._original_help_command
For more information, check out the relevant :ref:`documentation <ext_commands_help_command>`.
Cogs have completely been revamped. They are documented in :ref:`ext_commands_cogs` as well.
Cogs are now required to have a base class, :class:`~.commands.Cog` for future proofing purposes. This comes with special methods to customise some behaviour.
- :meth:`.Cog.cog_unload`
- This is called when a cog needs to do some cleanup, such as cancelling a task.
- :meth:`.Cog.bot_check_once`
- This registers a :meth:`.Bot.check_once` check.
- :meth:`.Cog.bot_check`
- This registers a regular :meth:`.Bot.check` check.
- :meth:`.Cog.cog_check`
- This registers a check that applies to every command in the cog.
- :meth:`.Cog.cog_command_error`
- This is a special error handler that is called whenever an error happens inside the cog.
- :meth:`.Cog.cog_before_invoke` and :meth:`.Cog.cog_after_invoke`
- A special method that registers a cog before and after invoke hook. More information can be found in :ref:`migrating_1_0_before_after_hook`.
Those that were using listeners, such as on_message
inside a cog will now have to explicitly mark them as such using the :meth:`.commands.Cog.listener` decorator.
Along with that, cogs have gained the ability to have custom names through specifying it in the class definition line. More options can be found in the metaclass that facilitates all this, :class:`.commands.CogMeta`.
An example cog with every special method registered and a custom name is as follows:
class MyCog(commands.Cog, name='Example Cog'):
def cog_unload(self):
print('cleanup goes here')
def bot_check(self, ctx):
print('bot check')
return True
def bot_check_once(self, ctx):
print('bot check once')
return True
async def cog_check(self, ctx):
print('cog local check')
return await ctx.bot.is_owner(ctx.author)
async def cog_command_error(self, ctx, error):
print('Error in {0.command.qualified_name}: {1}'.format(ctx, error))
async def cog_before_invoke(self, ctx):
print('cog local before: {0.command.qualified_name}'.format(ctx))
async def cog_after_invoke(self, ctx):
print('cog local after: {0.command.qualified_name}'.format(ctx))
@commands.Cog.listener()
async def on_message(self, message):
pass
Commands have gained new before and after invocation hooks that allow you to do an action before and after a command is run.
They take a single parameter, :class:`~ext.commands.Context` and they must be a coroutine.
They are on a global, per-cog, or per-command basis.
Basically:
# global hooks: @bot.before_invoke async def before_any_command(ctx): # do something before a command is called pass @bot.after_invoke async def after_any_command(ctx): # do something after a command is called pass
The after invocation is hook always called, regardless of an error in the command. This makes it ideal for some error handling or clean up of certain resources such a database connection.
The per-command registration is as follows:
@bot.command() async def foo(ctx): await ctx.send('foo') @foo.before_invoke async def before_foo_command(ctx): # do something before the foo command is called pass @foo.after_invoke async def after_foo_command(ctx): # do something after the foo command is called pass
The special cog method for these is :meth:`.Cog.cog_before_invoke` and :meth:`.Cog.cog_after_invoke`, e.g.:
class MyCog(commands.Cog):
async def cog_before_invoke(self, ctx):
ctx.secret_cog_data = 'foo'
async def cog_after_invoke(self, ctx):
print('{0.command} is done...'.format(ctx))
@commands.command()
async def foo(self, ctx):
await ctx.send(ctx.secret_cog_data)
To check if a command failed in the after invocation hook, you can use :attr:`.Context.command_failed`.
The invocation order is as follows:
- Command local before invocation hook
- Cog local before invocation hook
- Global before invocation hook
- The actual command
- Command local after invocation hook
- Cog local after invocation hook
- Global after invocation hook
Prior to v1.0, a converter was a type hint that could be a callable that could be invoked with a singular argument denoting the argument passed by the user as a string.
This system was eventually expanded to support a :class:`~ext.commands.Converter` system to allow plugging in the :class:`~ext.commands.Context` and do more complicated conversions such as the built-in "discord" converters.
In v1.0 this converter system was revamped to allow instances of :class:`~ext.commands.Converter` derived classes to be passed. For consistency, the :meth:`~ext.commands.Converter.convert` method was changed to always be a coroutine and will now take the two arguments as parameters.
Essentially, before:
class MyConverter(commands.Converter): def convert(self): return self.ctx.message.server.me
After:
class MyConverter(commands.Converter): async def convert(self, ctx, argument): return ctx.me
The command framework also got a couple new converters:
:class:`~ext.commands.clean_content` this is akin to :attr:`Message.clean_content` which scrubs mentions.
:class:`~ext.commands.UserConverter` will now appropriately convert :class:`User` only.
ChannelConverter
is now split into two different converters.