This repository contains the open source Go client for MessageBird's REST API. Documentation can be found at: https://developers.messagebird.com.
- Sign up for a free MessageBird account
- Create a new access key in the dashboard.
- An application written in Go to make use of this API
The easiest way to use the MessageBird API in your Go project is to install it using go get:
$ go get github.com/messagebird/go-rest-api/v7
Here is a quick example on how to get started. Assuming the go get installation worked, you can import the messagebird package like this:
import "github.com/messagebird/go-rest-api/v7"
Then, create an instance of messagebird.Client. It can be used to access the MessageBird APIs.
// Access keys can be managed through our dashboard.
accessKey := "your-access-key"
// Create a client.
client := messagebird.New(accessKey)
// Request the balance information, returned as a balance.Balance object.
balance, err := balance.Read(client)
if err != nil {
// Handle error.
return
}
// Display the results.
fmt.Println("Payment: ", balance.Payment)
fmt.Println("Type:", balance.Type)
fmt.Println("Amount:", balance.Amount)
This will give you something like:
$ go run example.go
Payment: prepaid
Type: credits
Amount: 9
Please see the other examples for a complete overview of all the available API calls.
When something goes wrong, our APIs can return more than a single error. They are therefore returned by the client as "error responses" that contain a slice of errors.
It is important to notice that the Voice API returns errors with a format that slightly differs from other APIs.
For this reason, errors returned by the voice
package are of type voice.ErrorResponse
. It contains voice.Error
structs. All other packages return messagebird.ErrorResponse
structs that contain a slice of messagebird.Error
.
An example of "simple" error handling is shown in the example above. Let's look how we can gain more in-depth insight in what exactly went wrong:
import "github.com/messagebird/go-rest-api/v7"
import "github.com/messagebird/go-rest-api/v7/sms"
// ...
_, err := sms.Read(client, "some-id")
if err != nil {
mbErr, ok := err.(messagebird.ErrorResponse)
if !ok {
// A non-MessageBird error occurred (no connection, perhaps?)
return err
}
fmt.Println("Code:", mbErr.Errors[0].Code)
fmt.Println("Description:", mbErr.Errors[0].Description)
fmt.Println("Parameter:", mbErr.Errors[0].Parameter)
}
voice.ErrorResponse
is very similar, except that it holds voice.Error
structs - those contain only Code
and Message
(not description!) fields:
import "github.com/messagebird/go-rest-api/v7/voice"
// ...
_, err := voice.CallFlowByID(client, "some-id")
if err != nil {
vErr, ok := err.(voice.ErrorResponse)
if !ok {
// A non-MessageBird (Voice) error occurred (no connection, perhaps?)
return err
}
fmt.Println("Code:", vErr.Errors[0].Code)
fmt.Println("Message:", vErr.Errors[0].Message)
}
To use the whatsapp sandbox you need to enable the FeatureConversationsAPIWhatsAppSandbox
feature.
client.EnableFeatures(messagebird.FeatureConversationsAPIWhatsAppSandbox)
Complete documentation, instructions, and examples are available at: https://developers.messagebird.com.
If you're upgrading from older versions, please read the Messagebird go-rest-api
upgrading guide.
The MessageBird REST Client for Go is licensed under The BSD 2-Clause License. Copyright (c) 2014, 2015, MessageBird