← Botkit Documentation ← Class Index
This is a class reference for all the methods exposed by the botkit package.
- Botkit
- BotkitBotFrameworkAdapter
- TeamsBotWorker
- BotWorker
- BotkitConversation
- BotkitDialogWrapper
- BotkitTestClient
- TeamsInvokeMiddleware
Create a new instance of Botkit to define the controller for a conversational app.
To connect Botkit to a chat platform, pass in a fully configured adapter
.
If one is not specified, Botkit will expose an adapter for the Microsoft Bot Framework.
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { Botkit } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
- addDep()
- addDialog()
- addPluginExtension()
- afterDialog()
- completeDep()
- getConfig()
- getLocalView()
- handleTurn()
- hears()
- interrupts()
- loadModule()
- loadModules()
- on()
- publicFolder()
- ready()
- saveState()
- shutdown()
- spawn()
- trigger()
- usePlugin()
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
config | BotkitConfiguration | Configuration for this instance of Botkit |
Create a new Botkit instance and optionally specify a platform-specific adapter. By default, Botkit will create a BotFrameworkAdapter.
const controller = new Botkit({
adapter: some_adapter,
webhook_uri: '/api/messages',
});
controller.on('message', async(bot, message) => {
// do something!
});
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
PATH | string | The path of the main Botkit SDK, used to generate relative paths |
adapter | any | Any BotBuilder-compatible adapter - defaults to a BotFrameworkAdapter |
dialogSet | DialogSet | A BotBuilder DialogSet that serves as the top level dialog container for the Botkit app |
http | any | A direct reference to the underlying HTTP server object |
storage | Storage | a BotBuilder storage driver - defaults to MemoryStorage |
version | string | The current version of Botkit Core |
webserver | any | An Express webserver |
plugins | Access plugin extension methods. After a plugin calls controller.addPluginExtension('foo', extension_methods) , the extension will then be available atcontroller.plugins.foo |
(For use by Botkit plugins only) - Add a dependency to Botkit's bootup process that must be marked as completed using completeDep()
.
Botkit's controller.ready()
function will not fire until all dependencies have been marked complete.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
name | string | The name of the dependency that is being loaded. |
For example, a plugin that needs to do an asynchronous task before Botkit proceeds might do:
controller.addDep('my_async_plugin');
somethingAsync().then(function() {
controller.completeDep('my_async_plugin');
});
Add a dialog to the bot, making it accessible via bot.beginDialog(dialog_id)
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
dialog | Dialog | A dialog to be added to the bot's dialog set |
// Create a dialog -- `BotkitConversation` is just one way to create a dialog
const my_dialog = new BotkitConversation('my_dialog', controller);
my_dialog.say('Hello');
// Add the dialog to the Botkit controller
controller.addDialog(my_dialog);
// Later on, trigger the dialog into action!
controller.on('message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.beginDialog('my_dialog');
});
(Plugins only) Extend Botkit's controller with new functionality and make it available globally via the controller object.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
name | string | name of plugin |
extension | any | an object containing methods |
// define the extension interface
let extension = {
stuff: () => { return 'stuff' }
}
// register the extension
controller.addPluginExtension('foo', extension);
// call extension
controller.plugins.foo.stuff();
Bind a handler to the end of a dialog. NOTE: bot worker cannot use bot.reply(), must use bot.send()
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
dialog | the dialog object or the id of the dialog | |
handler | BotkitHandler | a handler function in the form async(bot, dialog_results) => {} |
Learn more about handling end-of-conversation
(For use by plugins only) - Mark a bootup dependency as loaded and ready to use
Botkit's controller.ready()
function will not fire until all dependencies have been marked complete.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
name | string | The name of the dependency that has completed loading. |
Get a value from the configuration.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
key (optional) | string | The name of a value stored in the configuration |
Returns
The value stored in the configuration (or null if absent)
For example:
// get entire config object
let config = controller.getConfig();
// get a specific value from the config
let webhook_uri = controller.getConfig('webhook_uri');
Convert a local path from a plugin folder to a full path relative to the webserver's main views folder. Allows a plugin to bundle views/layouts and make them available to the webserver's renderer.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
path_to_view | any | something like path.join(__dirname,'views') |
Accepts the result of a BotBuilder adapter's processActivity()
method and processes it into a Botkit-style message and BotWorker instance
which is then used to test for triggers and emit events.
NOTE: This method should only be used in custom adapters that receive messages through mechanisms other than the main webhook endpoint (such as those received via websocket, for example)
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
turnContext | TurnContext | a TurnContext representing an incoming message, typically created by an adapter's processActivity() method. |
Instruct your bot to listen for a pattern, and do something when that pattern is heard.
Patterns will be "heard" only if the message is not already handled by an in-progress dialog.
To "hear" patterns before dialogs are processed, use controller.interrupts()
instead.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
patterns | One or more string, regular expression, or test function | |
events | A list of event types that should be evaluated for the given patterns | |
handler | BotkitHandler | a function that will be called should the pattern be matched |
For example:
// listen for a simple keyword
controller.hears('hello','message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message,'I heard you say hello.');
});
// listen for a regular expression
controller.hears(new RegExp(/^[A-Z\s]+$/), 'message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message,'I heard a message IN ALL CAPS.');
});
// listen using a function
controller.hears(async (message) => { return (message.intent === 'hello') }, 'message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message,'This message matches the hello intent.');
});
Instruct your bot to listen for a pattern, and do something when that pattern is heard. Interruptions work just like "hears" triggers, but fire before the dialog system is engaged, and thus handlers will interrupt the normal flow of messages through the processing pipeline.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
patterns | One or more string, regular expression, or test function | |
events | A list of event types that should be evaluated for the given patterns | |
handler | BotkitHandler | a function that will be called should the pattern be matched |
controller.interrupts('help','message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message,'Before anything else, you need some help!')
});
Load a Botkit feature module
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
p | string | path to module file |
Load all Botkit feature modules located in a given folder.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
p | string | path to a folder of module files |
exts | the extensions that you would like to load (default: ['.js']) |
controller.ready(() => {
// load all modules from sub-folder features/
controller.loadModules('./features');
});
Bind a handler function to one or more events.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
events | One or more event names | |
handler | BotkitHandler | a handler function that will fire whenever one of the named events is received. |
controller.on('conversationUpdate', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message,'I received a conversationUpdate event.');
});
Expose a folder to the web as a set of static files. Useful for plugins that need to bundle additional assets!
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
alias | any | the public alias ie /myfiles |
path | any | the actual path something like __dirname + '/public' |
// make content of the local public folder available at http://MYBOTURL/public/myplugin
controller.publicFolder('/public/myplugin', __dirname + '/public);
Use controller.ready()
to wrap any calls that require components loaded during the bootup process.
This will ensure that the calls will not be made until all of the components have successfully been initialized.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
handler | A function to run when Botkit is booted and ready to run. |
For example:
controller.ready(() => {
controller.loadModules(__dirname + '/features');
});
Save the current conversation state pertaining to a given BotWorker's activities. Note: this is normally called internally and is only required when state changes happen outside of the normal processing flow.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
bot | BotWorker | a BotWorker instance created using controller.spawn() |
Shutdown the webserver and prepare to terminate the app.
Causes Botkit to first emit a special shutdown
event, process any bound handlers, and then finally terminate the webserver.
Bind any necessary cleanup helpers to the shutdown event - for example, close the connection to mongo.
await controller.shutdown();
controller.on('shutdown', async() => {
console.log('Bot is shutting down!');
});
Create a platform-specific BotWorker instance that can be used to respond to messages or generate new outbound messages.
The spawned bot
contains all information required to process outbound messages and handle dialog state, and may also contain extensions
for handling platform-specific events or activities.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
config (optional) | any | Preferably receives a DialogContext, though can also receive a TurnContext. If excluded, must call bot.changeContext(reference) before calling any other method. |
custom_adapter (optional) | BotAdapter |
Trigger an event to be fired. This will cause any bound handlers to be executed. Note: This is normally used internally, but can be used to emit custom events.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
event | string | the name of the event |
bot (optional) | BotWorker | a BotWorker instance created using controller.spawn() |
message (optional) | BotkitMessage | An incoming message or event |
// fire a custom event
controller.trigger('my_custom_event', bot, message);
// handle the custom event
controller.on('my_custom_event', async(bot, message) => {
//... do something
});
Load a plugin module and bind all included middlewares to their respective endpoints.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
plugin_or_function | A plugin module in the form of function(botkit) {...} that returns {name, middlewares, init} or an object in the same form. |
This class extends the BotFrameworkAdapter with a few additional features to support Microsoft Teams.
- Changes userAgent to reflect Botkit instead of BotBuilder
- Adds getChannels() (MS Teams)
- Adds middleware for adjusting location of tenant id field (MS Teams)
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { BotkitBotFrameworkAdapter } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
botkit_worker | TeamsBotWorker |
Get the list of channels in a MS Teams team. Can only be called with a TurnContext that originated in a team conversation - 1:1 conversations happen outside a team and thus do not contain the required information to call this API.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
context | TurnContext | A TurnContext object representing a message or event from a user in Teams |
Returns
an array of channels in the format [{name: string, id: string}]
This is a specialized version of Botkit's core BotWorker class that includes additional methods for interacting with Microsoft Teams. It includes all functionality from the base class, as well as the extension methods below. This BotWorker is used with the built-in Bot Framework adapter.
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { TeamsBotWorker } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
controller | Botkit | |
config | any |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
teams | TeamsInfo | Grants access to the TeamsInfo helper class See: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/javascript/api/botbuilder/teamsinfo?view=botbuilder-ts-latest |
Reply to a Teams task module task/fetch or task/submit with a task module response. See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/platform/task-modules-and-cards/task-modules/task-modules-bots
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | BotkitMessage | |
taskInfo | any | an object in the form {type, value} |
A base class for a bot
instance, an object that contains the information and functionality for taking action in response to an incoming message.
Note that adapters are likely to extend this class with additional platform-specific methods - refer to the adapter documentation for these extensions.
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { BotWorker } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
- beginDialog()
- cancelAllDialogs()
- changeContext()
- ensureMessageFormat()
- getActiveDialog()
- getConfig()
- hasActiveDialog()
- httpBody()
- httpStatus()
- isDialogActive()
- replaceDialog()
- reply()
- say()
- startConversationWithUser()
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
controller | Botkit | A pointer to the main Botkit controller |
config | any | An object typically containing { dialogContext, reference, context, activity } |
Create a new BotWorker instance. Do not call this directly - instead, use controller.spawn().
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
controller | Get a reference to the main Botkit controller. |
Begin a pre-defined dialog by specifying its id. The dialog will be started in the same context (same user, same channel) in which the original incoming message was received. See "Using Dialogs" in the core documentation.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
id | string | id of dialog |
options (optional) | any | object containing options to be passed into the dialog |
controller.hears('hello', 'message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.beginDialog(GREETINGS_DIALOG);
});
Cancel any and all active dialogs for the current user/context.
Alter the context in which a bot instance will send messages. Use this method to create or adjust a bot instance so that it can send messages to a predefined user/channel combination.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
reference | Partial<ConversationReference> | A ConversationReference, most likely captured from an incoming message and stored for use in proactive messaging scenarios. |
// get the reference field and store it.
const saved_reference = message.reference;
// later on...
let bot = await controller.spawn();
bot.changeContext(saved_reference);
bot.say('Hello!');
Take a crudely-formed Botkit message with any sort of field (may just be a string, may be a partial message object) and map it into a beautiful BotFramework Activity. Any fields not found in the Activity definition will be moved to activity.channelData.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message |
Returns
a properly formed Activity object
Get a reference to the active dialog
Returns
a reference to the active dialog or undefined if no dialog is active
Get a value from the BotWorker's configuration.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
key (optional) | string | The name of a value stored in the configuration |
Returns
The value stored in the configuration (or null if absent)
let original_context = bot.getConfig('context');
await original_context.sendActivity('send directly using the adapter instead of Botkit');
Check if any dialog is active or not
Returns
true if there is an active dialog, otherwise false
Set the http response body for this turn. Use this to define the response value when the platform requires a synchronous response to the incoming webhook.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
body | any | (any) a value that will be returned as the http response body |
Example handling of a /slash command from Slack:
controller.on('slash_command', async(bot, message) => {
bot.httpBody('This is a reply to the slash command.');
})
Set the http response status code for this turn
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
status | number | a valid http status code like 200 202 301 500 etc |
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
// respond with a 500 error code for some reason!
bot.httpStatus(500);
});
Check to see if a given dialog is currently active in the stack
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
id | string | The id of a dialog to look for in the dialog stack |
Returns
true if dialog with id is located anywhere in the dialog stack
Replace any active dialogs with a new a pre-defined dialog by specifying its id. The dialog will be started in the same context (same user, same channel) in which the original incoming message was received. See "Using Dialogs" in the core documentation.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
id | string | id of dialog |
options (optional) | any | object containing options to be passed into the dialog |
controller.hears('hello', 'message', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.replaceDialog(GREETINGS_DIALOG);
});
Reply to an incoming message. Message will be sent using the context of the source message, which may in some cases be different than the context used to spawn the bot.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
src | Partial<BotkitMessage> | An incoming message, usually passed in to a handler function |
resp | A string containing the text of a reply, or more fully formed message object |
Returns
Return value will contain the results of the send action, typically `{id: <id of message>}`
Note that like bot.say(), reply()
can take a string or a message object.
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.reply(message, 'I received an event and am replying to it.');
});
Send a message using whatever context the bot
was spawned in or set using changeContext() --
or more likely, one of the platform-specific helpers like
startPrivateConversation() (Slack),
startConversationWithUser() (Twilio SMS),
and startConversationWithUser() (Facebook Messenger).
Be sure to check the platform documentation for others - most adapters include at least one.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | A string containing the text of a reply, or more fully formed message object |
Returns
Return value will contain the results of the send action, typically `{id: <id of message>}`
Simple use in event handler (acts the same as bot.reply)
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.say('I received an event!');
});
Use with a freshly spawned bot and bot.changeContext:
let bot = controller.spawn(OPTIONS);
bot.changeContext(REFERENCE);
bot.say('ALERT! I have some news.');
Use with multi-field message object:
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
bot.say({
text: 'I heard an event',
attachments: [
title: message.type,
text: `The message was of type ${ message.type }`,
// ...
]
});
});
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
reference | any |
An extension on the BotBuilder Dialog Class that provides a Botkit-friendly interface for
defining and interacting with multi-message dialogs. Dialogs can be constructed using say()
, ask()
and other helper methods.
// define the structure of your dialog...
const convo = new BotkitConversation('foo', controller);
convo.say('Hello!');
convo.ask('What is your name?', async(answer, convo, bot) => {
await bot.say('Your name is ' + answer);
});
controller.dialogSet.add(convo);
// later on, trigger this dialog by its id
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.beginDialog('foo');
})
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { BotkitConversation } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
- addAction()
- addChildDialog()
- addGotoDialog()
- addMessage()
- addQuestion()
- after()
- ask()
- before()
- onChange()
- say()
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
dialogId | string | A unique identifier for this dialog, used to later trigger this dialog |
controller | Botkit | A pointer to the main Botkit controller |
Create a new BotkitConversation object
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
script | any | A map of every message in the dialog, broken into threads |
An an action to the conversation timeline. This can be used to go to switch threads or end the dialog.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
action | string | An action or thread name |
thread_name | string | The name of the thread to which this action is added. Defaults to default |
When provided the name of another thread in the conversation, this will cause the bot to go immediately to that thread.
Otherwise, use one of the following keywords:
stop
repeat
complete
timeout
Learn more about building conversations →
// go to a thread called "next_thread"
convo.addAction('next_thread');
// end the conversation and mark as successful
convo.addAction('complete');
Cause the dialog to call a child dialog, wait for it to complete, then store the results in a variable and resume the parent dialog. Use this to combine multiple dialogs into bigger interactions.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
dialog_id | string | the id of another dialog |
key_name (optional) | string | the variable name in which to store the results of the child dialog. if not provided, defaults to dialog_id. |
thread_name | string | the name of a thread to which this call should be added. defaults to 'default' |
Learn more about building conversations →
// define a profile collection dialog
let profileDialog = new BotkitConversation('PROFILE_DIALOG', controller);
profileDialog.ask('What is your name?', async(res, convo, bot) => {}, {key: 'name'});
profileDialog.ask('What is your age?', async(res, convo, bot) => {}, {key: 'age'});
profileDialog.ask('What is your location?', async(res, convo, bot) => {}, {key: 'location'});
controller.addDialog(profileDialog);
let onboard = new BotkitConversation('ONBOARDING', controller);
onboard.say('Hello! It is time to collect your profile data.');
onboard.addChildDialog('PROFILE_DIALOG', 'profile');
onboard.say('Hello, {{vars.profile.name}}! Onboarding is complete.');
Cause the current dialog to handoff to another dialog. The parent dialog will not resume when the child dialog completes. However, the afterDialog event will not fire for the parent dialog until all child dialogs complete. Use this to combine multiple dialogs into bigger interactions.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
dialog_id | string | the id of another dialog |
thread_name | string | the name of a thread to which this call should be added. defaults to 'default' |
Learn more about building conversations →
let parent = new BotkitConversation('parent', controller);
let child = new BotkitConversation('child', controller);
parent.say('Moving on....');
parent.addGotoDialog('child');
Add a message template to a specific thread.
Messages added with say()
and addMessage()
will be sent one after another without a pause.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | Message template to be sent | |
thread_name | string | Name of thread to which message will be added |
Learn more about building conversations →
let conversation = new BotkitConversation('welcome', controller);
conversation.say('Hello! Welcome to my app.');
conversation.say('Let us get started...');
// pass in a message with an action that will cause gotoThread to be called...
conversation.addAction('continuation');
conversation.addMessage('This is a different thread completely', 'continuation');
Identical to ask(), but accepts the name of a thread to which the question is added.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | A message that will be used as the prompt | |
handlers | One or more handler functions defining possible conditional actions based on the response to the question | |
key | Name of variable to store response in. | |
thread_name | string | Name of thread to which message will be added |
Learn more about building conversations →
Bind a function to run after the dialog has completed. The first parameter to the handler will include a hash of all variables set and values collected from the user during the conversation. The second parameter to the handler is a BotWorker object that can be used to start new dialogs or take other actions.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
handler | in the form async(results, bot) { ... } |
Learn more about handling end of conversation
let convo = new BotkitConversation(MY_CONVO, controller);
convo.ask('What is your name?', [], 'name');
convo.ask('What is your age?', [], 'age');
convo.ask('What is your favorite color?', [], 'color');
convo.after(async(results, bot) => {
// handle results.name, results.age, results.color
});
controller.addDialog(convo);
Add a question to the default thread. In addition to a message template, receives either a single handler function to call when an answer is provided, or an array of handlers paired with trigger patterns. When providing multiple conditions to test, developers may also provide a handler marked as the default choice.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | a message that will be used as the prompt | |
handlers | one or more handler functions defining possible conditional actions based on the response to the question. | |
key | name of variable to store response in. |
Learn more about building conversations →
// ask a question, handle the response with a function
convo.ask('What is your name?', async(response, convo, bot, full_message) => {
await bot.say('Oh your name is ' + response);
}, {key: 'name'});
// ask a question, evaluate answer, take conditional action based on response
convo.ask('Do you want to eat a taco?', [
{
pattern: 'yes',
type: 'string',
handler: async(response_text, convo, bot, full_message) => {
return await convo.gotoThread('yes_taco');
}
},
{
pattern: 'no',
type: 'string',
handler: async(response_text, convo, bot, full_message) => {
return await convo.gotoThread('no_taco');
}
},
{
default: true,
handler: async(response_text, convo, bot, full_message) => {
await bot.say('I do not understand your response!');
// start over!
return await convo.repeat();
}
}
], {key: 'tacos'});
Register a handler function that will fire before a given thread begins.
Use this hook to set variables, call APIs, or change the flow of the conversation using convo.gotoThread
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
thread_name | string | A valid thread defined in this conversation |
handler | A handler function in the form async(convo, bot) => { ... } |
convo.addMessage('This is the foo thread: var == {{vars.foo}}', 'foo');
convo.before('foo', async(convo, bot) => {
// set a variable here that can be used in the message template
convo.setVar('foo','THIS IS FOO');
});
Bind a function to run whenever a user answers a specific question. Can be used to validate input and take conditional actions.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
variable | string | name of the variable to watch for changes |
handler | a handler function that will fire whenever a user's response is used to change the value of the watched variable |
convo.ask('What is your name?', [], 'name');
convo.onChange('name', async(response, convo, bot) => {
// user changed their name!
// do something...
});
Add a non-interactive message to the default thread.
Messages added with say()
and addMessage()
will not wait for a response, will be sent one after another without a pause.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
message | Message template to be sent |
Learn more about building conversations →
let conversation = new BotkitConversation('welcome', controller);
conversation.say('Hello! Welcome to my app.');
conversation.say('Let us get started...');
This class is used to provide easy access to common actions taken on active BotkitConversation instances. These objects are passed into handlers bound to BotkitConversations using .before .onChange and conditional handler functions passed to .ask and .addQuestion Grants access to convo.vars convo.gotoThread() convo.setVar() and convo.repeat().
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { BotkitDialogWrapper } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
dc | DialogContext | |
step | BotkitConversationStep |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
vars | An object containing variables and user responses from this conversation. |
Jump immediately to the first message in a different thread.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
thread | string | Name of a thread |
Repeat the last message sent on the next turn.
Set the value of a variable that will be available to messages in the conversation. Equivalent to convo.vars.key = val; Results in {{vars.key}} being replaced with the value in val.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
key | any | the name of the variable |
val | any | the value for the variable |
Stop the dialog.
A client for testing dialogs in isolation.
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { BotkitTestClient } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
channelId | string | The channelId to be used for the test. Use 'emulator' or 'test' if you are uncertain of the channel you are targeting. Otherwise, it is recommended that you use the id for the channel(s) your bot will be using and write a test case for each channel. |
bot | Botkit | (Required) The Botkit bot that has the skill to test. |
dialogToTest | (Required) The identifier of the skill to test in the bot. | |
initialDialogOptions | any | (Optional) additional argument(s) to pass to the dialog being started. |
middlewares | (Optional) a stack of middleware to be run when testing | |
conversationState | ConversationState | (Optional) A ConversationState instance to use in the test client |
Create a BotkitTestClient to test a dialog without having to create a full-fledged adapter.
let client = new BotkitTestClient('test', bot, MY_DIALOG, MY_OPTIONS);
let reply = await client.sendActivity('first message');
assert.strictEqual(reply.text, 'first reply', 'reply failed');
Parameters
Argument | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
testAdapter | TestAdapter | |
bot | Botkit | (Required) The Botkit bot that has the skill to test. |
dialogToTest | (Required) The identifier of the skill to test in the bot. | |
initialDialogOptions | any | (Optional) additional argument(s) to pass to the dialog being started. |
middlewares | (Optional) a stack of middleware to be run when testing | |
conversationState | ConversationState | (Optional) A ConversationState instance to use in the test client |
Create a BotkitTestClient to test a dialog without having to create a full-fledged adapter.
let client = new BotkitTestClient('test', bot, MY_DIALOG, MY_OPTIONS);
let reply = await client.sendActivity('first message');
assert.strictEqual(reply.text, 'first reply', 'reply failed');
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
conversationState | ConversationState | |
dialogTurnResult | DialogTurnResult |
Get the next reply waiting to be delivered (if one exists)
Send an activity into the dialog.
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
activity | an activity potentially with textjavascript<br/>DialogTest.send('hello').assertReply('hello yourself').then(done);<br/> |
Returns
a TestFlow that can be used to assert replies etc
When used, causes Botkit to emit special events for teams "invokes" Based on https://github.com/microsoft/botbuilder-js/blob/master/libraries/botbuilder/src/teamsActivityHandler.ts This allows Botkit bots to respond directly to task/fetch or task/submit events, as an example. To use this, bind it to the adapter before creating the Botkit controller:
const Botkit = new Botkit({...});
botkit.adapter.use(new TeamsInvokeMiddleware());
// can bind directly to task/fetch, task/submit and other invoke types used by teams
controller.on('task/fetch', async(bot, message) => {
await bot.replyWithTaskInfo(message, taskInfo);
});
To use this class in your application, first install the package:
npm install --save botkit
Then import this and other classes into your code:
const { TeamsInvokeMiddleware } = require('botkit');
This class includes the following methods:
Not for direct use - implements the MiddlewareSet's required onTurn function used to process the event
Parameters
Argument | Type | description |
---|---|---|
context | TurnContext | |
next |
Defines the options used when instantiating Botkit to create the main app controller with new Botkit(options)
Fields
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
adapter | any | A fully configured BotBuilder Adapter, such as botbuilder-adapter-slack or botbuilder-adapter-web The adapter is responsible for translating platform-specific messages into the format understood by Botkit and BotBuilder. |
adapterConfig | If using the BotFramework service, options included in adapterConfig will be passed to the new Adapter when created internally.See BotFrameworkAdapterSettings. |
|
dialogStateProperty | string | Name of the dialogState property in the ConversationState that will be used to automatically track the dialog state. Defaults to dialogState . |
disable_console | boolean | Disable messages normally sent to the console during startup. |
disable_webserver | boolean | Disable webserver. If true, Botkit will not create a webserver or expose any webhook endpoints automatically. Defaults to false. |
jsonLimit | string | Limit of the size of incoming JSON payloads parsed by the Express bodyParser. Defaults to '100kb' |
storage | Storage | A Storage interface compatible with this specification Defaults to the ephemeral MemoryStorage implementation. |
urlEncodedLimit | string | Limit of the size of incoming URL encoded payloads parsed by the Express bodyParser. Defaults to '100kb' |
webhook_uri | string | Path used to create incoming webhook URI. Defaults to /api/messages |
webserver | any | An instance of Express used to define web endpoints. If not specified, one will be created internally. Note: only use your own Express if you absolutely must for some reason. Otherwise, use controller.webserver |
webserver_middlewares | An array of middlewares that will be automatically bound to the webserver. Should be in the form (req, res, next) => {} |
|
Fields
A handler function passed into hears()
or on()
that receives a BotWorker instance and a BotkitMessage. Should be defined as an async function and/or return a Promise.
The form of these handlers should be:
async (bot, message) => {
// stuff.
}
For example:
controller.on('event', async(bot, message) => {
// do somethign using bot and message like...
await bot.reply(message,'Received an event.');
});
Defines the expected form of a message or event object being handled by Botkit. Will also contain any additional fields including in the incoming payload.
Fields
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
channel | string | Unique identifier of the room/channel/space in which the message was sent. Typically contains the platform specific designator for that channel. |
incoming_message | Activity | The original incoming BotBuilder Activity object as created by the adapter. |
reference | ConversationReference | A full ConversationReference object that defines the address of the message and all information necessary to send messages back to the originating location. Can be stored for later use, and used with bot.changeContext() to send proactive messages. |
text | string | Text of the message sent by the user (or primary value in case of button click) |
type | string | The type of event, in most cases defined by the messaging channel or adapter |
user | string | Unique identifier of user who sent the message. Typically contains the platform specific user id. |
value | string | Any value field received from the platform |
An interface for plugins that can contain multiple middlewares as well as an init function.
Fields
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
init | ||
middlewares | ||
name | string |