telegram-bot-api/docs/internals/adding-endpoints.md

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# Adding Endpoints
This is mostly useful if you've managed to catch a new Telegram Bot API update
before the library can get updated. It's also a great source of information
about how the types work internally.
## Creating the Config
The first step in adding a new endpoint is to create a new Config type for it.
These belong in `configs.go`.
Let's try and add the `deleteMessage` endpoint. We can see it requires two
fields; `chat_id` and `message_id`. We can create a struct for these.
```go
type DeleteMessageConfig struct {
ChatID ???
MessageID int
}
```
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What type should `ChatID` be? Telegram allows specifying numeric chat IDs or
channel usernames. Golang doesn't have union types, and interfaces are entirely
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untyped. This library solves this by adding two fields, a `ChatID` and a
`ChannelUsername`. We can now write the struct as follows.
```go
type DeleteMessageConfig struct {
ChannelUsername string
ChatID int64
MessageID int
}
```
Note that `ChatID` is an `int64`. Telegram chat IDs can be greater than 32 bits.
Okay, we now have our struct. But we can't send it yet. It doesn't implement
`Chattable` so it won't work with `Request` or `Send`.
### Making it `Chattable`
We can see that `Chattable` only requires a few methods.
```go
type Chattable interface {
params() (Params, error)
method() string
}
```
`params` is the fields associated with the request. `method` is the endpoint
that this Config is associated with.
Implementing the `method` is easy, so let's start with that.
```go
func (config DeleteMessageConfig) method() string {
return "deleteMessage"
}
```
Now we have to add the `params`. The `Params` type is an alias for
`map[string]string`. Telegram expects only a single field for `chat_id`, so we
have to determine what data to send.
We could use an if statement to determine which field to get the value from.
However, as this is a relatively common operation, there's helper methods for
`Params`. We can use the `AddFirstValid` method to go through each possible
value and stop when it discovers a valid one. Before writing your own Config,
it's worth taking a look through `params.go` to see what other helpers exist.
Now we can take a look at what a completed `params` method looks like.
```go
func (config DeleteMessageConfig) params() (Params, error) {
params := make(Params)
params.AddFirstValid("chat_id", config.ChatID, config.ChannelUsername)
params.AddNonZero("message_id", config.MessageID)
return params, nil
}
```
### Uploading Files
Let's imagine that for some reason deleting a message requires a document to be
uploaded and an optional thumbnail for that document. To add file upload
support we need to implement `Fileable`. This only requires one additional
method.
```go
type Fileable interface {
Chattable
files() []RequestFile
}
```
First, let's add some fields to store our files in. Most of the standard Configs
have similar fields for their files.
```diff
type DeleteMessageConfig struct {
ChannelUsername string
ChatID int64
MessageID int
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+ Delete RequestFileData
+ Thumb RequestFileData
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}
```
Adding another method is pretty simple. We'll always add a file named `delete`
and add the `thumb` file if we have one.
```go
func (config DeleteMessageConfig) files() []RequestFile {
files := []RequestFile{{
Name: "delete",
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Data: config.Delete,
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}}
if config.Thumb != nil {
files = append(files, RequestFile{
Name: "thumb",
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Data: config.Thumb,
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})
}
return files
}
```
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And now our files will upload! It will transparently handle uploads whether File
is a `FilePath`, `FileURL`, `FileBytes`, `FileReader`, or `FileID`.
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### Base Configs
Certain Configs have repeated elements. For example, many of the items sent to a
chat have `ChatID` or `ChannelUsername` fields, along with `ReplyToMessageID`,
`ReplyMarkup`, and `DisableNotification`. Instead of implementing all of this
code for each item, there's a `BaseChat` that handles it for your Config.
Simply embed it in your struct to get all of those fields.
There's only a few fields required for the `MessageConfig` struct after
embedding the `BaseChat` struct.
```go
type MessageConfig struct {
BaseChat
Text string
ParseMode string
DisableWebPagePreview bool
}
```
It also inherits the `params` method from `BaseChat`. This allows you to call
it, then you only have to add your new fields.
```go
func (config MessageConfig) params() (Params, error) {
params, err := config.BaseChat.params()
if err != nil {
return params, err
}
params.AddNonEmpty("text", config.Text)
// Add your other fields
return params, nil
}
```
Similarly, there's a `BaseFile` struct for adding an associated file and
`BaseEdit` struct for editing messages.
## Making it Friendly
After we've got a Config type, we'll want to make it more user-friendly. We can
do this by adding a new helper to `helpers.go`. These are functions that take
in the required data for the request to succeed and populate a Config.
Telegram only requires two fields to call `deleteMessage`, so this will be fast.
```go
func NewDeleteMessage(chatID int64, messageID int) DeleteMessageConfig {
return DeleteMessageConfig{
ChatID: chatID,
MessageID: messageID,
}
}
```
Sometimes it makes sense to add more helpers if there's methods where you have
to set exactly one field. You can also add helpers that accept a `username`
string for channels if it's a common operation.
And that's it! You've added a new method.