A chat-bot for Telegram that can add comments to Trello cards, your TickTick todo-list and your Diigo bookmarks, from any Telegram client.
The first version of this bot was developed by following the steps provided in Serverless Telegram Bot with Firebase - Francisco Gutiérrez - Medium.
/todo <task> [#tag [#...]]
adds a ToDo/task to TickTick's inbox, for sorting/today <task> [#tag [#...]]
adds a ToDo/task to TickTick, due today
/tags
lists the tags associated to each Trello card/next
lists the nexttask
for each Trello card/next <task> [#tag]
adds atask
to the top of the check-list of the Trello card associated with#tag
/note <text> [#card [#...]]
adds a comment to the specified Trello card(s), for journaling
/shelf <spotify_album_url>
proposes the addition of an album to the adrienjoly/album-shelf GitHub repository (requires options:spotify.clientid
,spotify.secret
andgithub.token
with "public repo" permissions)
/version
returns the version of the Bot
Notes:
- You can find an up-to-date list of commands in the
commandHandlers
constant defined insrc/messageHandler.ts
; - You can find commands that I plan to add later in the ToDo / Next steps section of this page.
To get started, you just need git
, NodeJS and to follow these instructions:
$ git clone https://github.com/adrienjoly/telegram-scribe-bot.git
$ cd telegram-scribe-bot
$ nvm use # to use the project's expected Node.js version
$ make install
$ make test # run automated test suites
Before making your chat-bot accessible through Telegram, you can test it locally:
$ make test-bot
This command will start a CLI that will allow you to interact with the bot (e.g. to test the connection with Trello and other services) without having to put it online.
Let's see how to set it up.
Credentials of your services must be provided in a .config.json
file, at the root directory of the project.
Initialize it based on the provided template: $ cp .config.example.json .config.json
Trello credentials must be provided in your .config.json
file.
- Copy your Trello API Key (from trello.com/app-key) and paste it as the value of the
trello.apikey
variable, in your.config.json
file - Manually generate a Token (a link is provided on trello.com/app-key, below the Trello API Key) and paste it as the value of the
trello.usertoken
variable, still in your.config.json
file - Run
$ tools/trello-boards.ts
to make sure that these credentials give access to Trello's API and display the list of the Trello boards you have access to - Copy the 24-characters-long identifier of the Trello board that you want your bot to edit, and paste it as the value of the
trello.boardid
variable of your.config.json
file
In order to add comments and tasks to your Trello cards, you must associate one or more hashtags to these cards.
How to achieve this?
- Open one of your Trello cards
- In the description of that card, add the following text:
telegram-scribe-bot:addCommentsFromTaggedNotes(#mytag1,mytag2,...)
, and save your changes - After doing so, you'll be able to add a comment to that card, by sending the following message through your Telegram app:
/note hello world! #mytag1
For instance, if you have a card in which you want to store your #diary
notes as comments, add the following line to the description of that card:
telegram-scribe-bot:addCommentsFromTaggedNotes(#diary)
After doing that, sending the following chat message should add a comment to that card:
/note I had a great day today! #diary
Complete your .config.json
file by providing the credentials of the services you want the bot to interact with:
- Your Telegram user ID can be retrieved by sending
/start
to https://web.telegram.org/k/#@userinfobot - Spotify credentials can be generated from https://developer.spotify.com/dashboard/applications
- GitHub token (with
public_repo
scope) can be generated from https://github.com/settings/tokens
Follow these steps to deploy your bot to Firebase and make it accessible through Telegram.
- In your Telegram app, start a conversation with @BotFather
- Write the command
/newBot
and follow the provided steps - Initialize the
.env
file (at the root directory of the project), based on the provided template:$ cp .env.example .env
- In the
.env
file, replace the defaultBOT_TOKEN
value by the Secret Token provided by that bot - Also, take note of the name of your bot (ends with
bot
), we'll need it later
- Go to your firebase console
- Add a new project
- In the
.firebaserc
file, replacetelegram-scribe-bot
by the id of that project
$ make setup-firebase
(to login to your Firebase account)$ make deploy-firebase
(will upload the source code to your Firebase project)- In the
.env
file, replace the defaultROUTER_URL
value by the one printed when deploying (previous step), it must end with/router/
$ make test-firebase
(to check that the function deployed on Firebase responds)$ make bind-firebase-webhook
(to bind that function to your Telegram bot)$ make test-firebase-webhook
(to check that the function's router URL was properly bound to your Telegram bot)
After making any change to your bot, don't forget to deploy again it using $ make deploy-firebase
.
- In your Telegram app, start a conversation with your bot (e.g. mine is @aj_scribe_bot)
- Send "hello"
- The bot should reply with your name
You can troubleshoot your bot using your firebase console.
Set telegram.onlyfromuserid
in your .config.json
file and call $ make deploy-firebase
again if you want the bot to only respond to that Telegram user identifier.
The steps are listed in the order I usually follow:
-
In the
commandHandlers
array ofsrc/messageHandler.ts
, add an entry for your command. At first, make it return a simplestring
, like we did for the/version
command. Deploy it and test it in production, just to make sure that you won't be blocked later at that critical step. -
Write an automated test in
src/use-cases/
, to define the expected reponse for a sample command. (see example) -
Write a minimal
CommandHandler
, just to make the test pass, without calling any 3rd-party API yet. (see example) -
Write a small tool to examine the response from the 3rd-party API. (see example)
-
Update the implementation of your
CommandHandler
, so it relies on the actual API response. Make sure that the test passes, when you provide your API credentials. (see example) -
Make the automated test mock the API request(s) so that it doesn't require API credentials to run. (see example)
In that step, you can leverage the
⚠ no match for [...]
logs displayed when running your test from step 5, in order to know which URL(s) to mock. -
Test your command locally, using
$ make test-bot
. -
Deploy and test your command in production, as explained above.
- Make setup easier and faster, e.g. by automatizing some of the steps
- ideas of "command" use cases to implement:
/next [#tag]
will list the nexttask
for each Trello card associated with#tag
/search <text> [#tag [#...]]
will search occurrences oftext
in comments of Trello cards, optionally filtered by#tags
/openwhyd <track> [#tag] [desc]
will add a music track (e.g. YouTube URL) to Openwhyd.org, in a playlist corresponding to thetag
, and may add adesc
ription if provided/issue <repo>
will create a github issue on the provided repo/bk <url> [desc] [#tag]>
will create a Diigo bookmark to that URL/met "<person name>" [@place] [#tag] [desc]
will create or update a Google Contact/convert
units of measure into others (e.g. timezones, sizes, currencies, data formats...)
- ideas of "request" use cases to implement:
- when waking up: invite to keep a note of the dream you were having
- before going to sleep: invite to keep a note of how was your day (i.e. mood) and of what you did that day (i.e. journal), possibly with a photo to illustrate it
- read issues for more.
No. It's actually pretty dumb. Think of it more like a terminal, or like MacOS' Spotlight feature: it uses Telegram as a way to save text to other services, through their API. That's it.
Sending data from a mobile terminal to a server is far from trivial. For instance, your internet connection may be unstable (or unexistent) at the time when you want to save something. In that case, you'd expect your message to be automatically re-sent as soon as your internet connectivity is back. Telegram provides that out of the box! ✨