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serenity

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Serenity is a Rust library for the Discord API.

View the examples on how to make and structure a bot.

Serenity supports bot login via the use of Client::new.

You may also check your tokens prior to login via the use of validate_token.

Once logged in, you may add handlers to your client to dispatch Events, by implementing the handlers in a trait, such as EventHandler::message. This will cause your handler to be called when a Event::MessageCreate is received. Each handler is given a Context, giving information about the event. See the client's module-level documentation.

The Shard is transparently handled by the library, removing unnecessary complexity. Sharded connections are automatically handled for you. See the gateway's documentation for more information.

A Cache is also provided for you. This will be updated automatically for you as data is received from the Discord API via events. When calling a method on a Context, the cache will first be searched for relevant data to avoid unnecessary HTTP requests to the Discord API. For more information, see the cache's module-level documentation.

Note that - although this documentation will try to be as up-to-date and accurate as possible - Discord hosts official documentation. If you need to be sure that some information piece is accurate, refer to their docs.

Example Bot

A basic ping-pong bot looks like:

#[macro_use] extern crate serenity;

use serenity::client::Client;
use serenity::prelude::EventHandler;
use serenity::framework::standard::StandardFramework;
use std::env;

struct Handler;

impl EventHandler for Handler {}

fn main() {
    // Login with a bot token from the environment
    let mut client = Client::new(&env::var("DISCORD_TOKEN").expect("token"), Handler)
        .expect("Error creating client");
    client.with_framework(StandardFramework::new()
        .configure(|c| c.prefix("~")) // set the bot's prefix to "~"
        .cmd("ping", ping));

    // start listening for events by starting a single shard
    if let Err(why) = client.start() {
        println!("An error occurred while running the client: {:?}", why);
    }
}

command!(ping(_context, message) {
    let _ = message.reply("Pong!");
});

Full Examples

Full examples, detailing and explaining usage of the basic functionality of the library, can be found in the examples directory.

Installation

Add the following to your Cargo.toml file:

[dependencies]
serenity = "0.5"

and to the top of your main.rs:

#[macro_use] extern crate serenity;

Serenity supports a minimum of Rust 1.25.

Features

Features can be enabled or disabled by configuring the library through Cargo.toml:

[dependencies.serenity]
default-features = false
features = ["pick", "your", "feature", "names", "here"]
version = "0.5"

The default features are: builder, cache, client, framework, gateway, http, model, standard_framework, and utils.

The following is a full list of features:

If you want all of the default features except for cache for example, you can list all but that:

[dependencies.serenity]
default-features = false
features = [
    "builder",
    "client",
    "framework",
    "gateway",
    "http",
    "model",
    "standard_framework",
    "utils",
]
version = "0.5"

Dependencies

Serenity requires the following dependencies:

Voice

The following dependencies all require the voice feature to be enabled in your Cargo.toml:

Voice+ffmpeg:

Voice+youtube-dl:

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